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Peter Dutton moves to relax detention secrecy rules – politics live | Peter Dutton moves to relax detention secrecy rules – politics live |
(35 minutes later) | |
11.46pm BST | |
23:46 | |
In case you missed it, Gareth Hutchens reports: | |
Six hundred of Australia’s biggest private companies could finally be forced to publish their high-level tax information, under a new push by Labor to repair a notorious piece of legislation. | |
Labor will introduce a private senators’ bill on Monday to amend the Taxation Administration Act 1953, to require private companies with more than $100m in turnover to release their tax information to the public annually. | |
The former Labor government passed similar legislation in 2013 but the provision was wound back by the Coalition in late 2015 before the changes could take effect. | |
11.43pm BST | |
23:43 | |
Kevin Rudd: giving the US a blank cheque on North Korea is irresponsible | |
I want to bring you more of Kevin Rudd’s comments on Malcolm Turnbull’s approach to the ANZUS. | |
Rudd wrote a piece for the Financial Times about the real potential for conflict over North Korea: | |
Some of us fear that we are sleepwalking again, blindly unaware of the abyss that lies ahead. | |
Rudd told the ABC that we have entered into a difficult and dangerous time. He says war on the peninsula is not probable but it is becoming more and more possible, | |
which is why we need calm language, solid diplomacy and not the sort of waving of arms into the air which we seem to have seen from Mr Turnbull in recent days about his Anzus pronouncements. | |
Rudd’s central point about the substantive issue is that China does not seem to think the US is serious about unilateral action against North Korea but in the US, it is a possibility. | |
But he saved his fire for the Turnbull government’s “joined at the hip” statement. | |
My response to this statement when I first saw it on the weekend was ‘good God, the conservatives in Australia have learnt nothing from the Iraq experience. John Howard gave president Bush a blank cheque on Iraq. You never as an Australian prime minister, as an ally of the United States, give the Americans before the event a blank cheque. There are multiple scenarios that could arise from the Korean peninsula and we cannot predict predict which if any of them would occur. But for an Australian prime minister to say that we automatically would become militarily involved in the event of a North Korean attack, frankly I think is irresponsible in terms of our core national security interests. | |
11.19pm BST | |
23:19 | |
There has been the sound of cannons this morning around the building, a welcome for Manasseh Damukana Sogavare, prime minister of the Solomon Islands, and his wife, Emmy Sogavare. | |
Malcolm Turnbull and Sogavare will witness the signing of a bilateral security treaty. | |
The PM put out this statement last week. | |
The visit by Prime Minister Sogavare is an important milestone following the conclusion of the Regional Assistance Mission to Solomon Islands (Ramsi) – a 14-year partnership that restored peace and stability to the Solomon Islands. | |
Prime Minister Sogavare and I will discuss the new era ahead for our bilateral development, economic, and security partnership. | |
Updated | |
at 11.40pm BST | |
11.05pm BST | 11.05pm BST |
23:05 | 23:05 |
The long goodbye | The long goodbye |
Good morning blogans, | Good morning blogans, |
It is a glorious morning in Canberra, where a brilliant sunrise has dawned and the symphony of leaf blowers begins in the courtyards of parliament. | It is a glorious morning in Canberra, where a brilliant sunrise has dawned and the symphony of leaf blowers begins in the courtyards of parliament. |
The political news is a mix of local and global. Adam Gartrell of Fairfax has dug up a sneaky move from last week which we all missed. The immigration minister Peter Dutton quietly introduced the Australian Border Force Amendment (Protected Information) Bill 2017 which would dump the extreme secrecy provisions that surround detention workers including teachers, lawyers and social workers from blowing the whistle if they saw neglect or abuse. The penalty at the moment is up to two years in prison. | The political news is a mix of local and global. Adam Gartrell of Fairfax has dug up a sneaky move from last week which we all missed. The immigration minister Peter Dutton quietly introduced the Australian Border Force Amendment (Protected Information) Bill 2017 which would dump the extreme secrecy provisions that surround detention workers including teachers, lawyers and social workers from blowing the whistle if they saw neglect or abuse. The penalty at the moment is up to two years in prison. |
This bill would repeal the definition of protected information – currently any information obtained in a person’s capacity as an entrusted person – and change it to ensure “only specific kinds of information” are covered by the secrecy and disclosure provisions. | |
From the explanatory memo: | From the explanatory memo: |
This bill seeks to balance the need to protect certain information, where appropriate, against the Australian government’s commitment to open government. | |
Doctors for Refugees’ Barri Phataford, who is involved in the court case, says bollocks. | |
He’s clarifying it now because the government is in the middle of a high court challenge which frankly they know they cannot win. | |
That bill does not appear to be up this week for debate. | That bill does not appear to be up this week for debate. |
Kevin Rudd has talked to Fran Kelly about the escalating tension between the US and North Korea. He has been highly critical of Malcolm Turnbull’s “arm waving” on any potential conflict between the two countries. | Kevin Rudd has talked to Fran Kelly about the escalating tension between the US and North Korea. He has been highly critical of Malcolm Turnbull’s “arm waving” on any potential conflict between the two countries. |
His comments come after Turnbull said on Friday the US were joined at the hip on defence matters. | His comments come after Turnbull said on Friday the US were joined at the hip on defence matters. |
Rudd suggested the conservative party had learnt nothing from the conflict with Iraq and Australian prime ministers should not be giving the US a “blank cheque”. | Rudd suggested the conservative party had learnt nothing from the conflict with Iraq and Australian prime ministers should not be giving the US a “blank cheque”. |
I will bring you some more of Rudd’s comments in a moment, in order to get this baby in the air. So grab a beverage, sit back and enjoy the ride of this week in parliament, my last on the #politicslive blog. For those who have missed the previous announcement, I am off to do other projects and Amy Remeikis, currently of Fairfax, will shortly take the reins. | |
In the meantime, talk to me in the thread, on the Twits @gabriellechan or on Facebook. | In the meantime, talk to me in the thread, on the Twits @gabriellechan or on Facebook. |
Updated | Updated |
at 11.29pm BST |