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Labor labels Xenophon 'the great pretender' after he supports media reforms – politics live Labor labels Xenophon 'the great pretender' after he supports media reforms – politics live
(35 minutes later)
5.33am BST
05:33
It’s the independent’s question - and Cathy McGowan has the floor:
My question is to the Minister for Immigration and Border Protection. It’s about Manus Island. Can you, minister, provide details of the Government’s plan to manage the closure of the regional processing centre on 31st October? This week I’ve had numerous representations from my constituents, rural Australians for Refugees, UNHCR and the Red Cross seeking more information and response from the Government that shows we can protect our borders and show compassion, mercy and justice.
Peter Dutton is as gentle as Peter Dutton knows how to be, but while he says the government wants the centre to close by October 31, he doesn’t confirm it will be.
I thank the honorable member for her question. I know that it’s a heartfelt question and on a number of occasions the honorable member has made representations to me on behalf of children who are here on visas,people who are here on visas otherwise, that may have illnesses want extended stay in Australia. I acknowledge her compassion and the work she does in this area. It’s important to her. It’s important to her community and I’m very pleased to take a question from her today.
I can inform the member that I have met with Prime Minister O’Neill in Port Moresby on 1 September. We continued our case from the Australian Government’s perspective, that is that we want to see the regional processing centre closed by 31st October. There’s obviously a lot of details and logistics to be worked through and some of the compound has already been dismantled. That process will continue.
Prime Minister O’Neill expressed to me that his government was intent on seeing the regional processing centre close as well and we have spoken with Prime Minister O’Neill and my counterpart, the new minister, Petras Thomas, about the way the logistics could operate, which may include those people which total about 200 found not to be refugees to be moved to an alternative detention away from the regional centre, given that they have no lawful claim to be in PNG.
There are in total just under 100 or so who have applied for packages to go back to their country of origin. We’ve had a record number of people that have taken up offers to return back to their country of origin, given that they don’t have legitimate claims to make in PNG. There is the capacity within the centre for about 400 people to be accommodated, and we will work with the PNG Government in helping them provide services to those people. We have to do it in a way going to the compassionate aspect and the spirit in which the member asked this question, we have to it in a way we don’t want to see boats restart.”
5.26am BST
05:26
Taxpayers to pick up Hadgkiss legal costs, but not any resulting fines
Paul Karp
Labor has targeted former ABCC chief, Nigel Hadgkiss, and employment minister, Michaelia Cash, in Senate question time.Hadgkiss resigned on Wednesday after he admitted in courtthat he had recklessly misrepresented the right of entry laws his own agency has responsibility for.
The first line of attack is essentially: why did Cash take no action against him, despite knowing of the conduct in October 2016? Cash responds that she didn’t want to prejudge the outcome of the court case.
The second line of attack is: how much will the government will fork out for his legal bills?
Cash replied that legal assistance is provided in accordance with the Commonwealth legal services direction, which is standard practice when the contravention is committed in a person’s capacity as agency head.
She doesn’t know what the bill will be, as the “matter still before the court”.
Asked to rule out indemnifying Hadgkiss for any penalty, Cash replied:“Hadgkiss has not sought an indemnity and the government will not be providing one.”
5.24am BST
05:24
Politics just keeps getting in the way of the friendship between Josh Frydenberg and Labor’s Ed Husic.
Husic targets his walking buddy with the same question Labor has been asking all afternoon: the government is now in its 5th year in office. Why did the minister tell Sydney householders their power prices have gone down? Why doesn’t this Liberal Government understand that people in my electorate are doing it tough? Just how out of touch is this Liberal Government?”
Frydenberg can’t help but add in a compliment.
He’s not abad bloke but has his facts wrong. Again the Labor Party is repeating the falsehoods in this place, misleading the Australian people, making facts up on the run, deceiving them about what theAustralian Energy Regulator, what the Australian Energy Market Commission have said.
The reality is that power prices in Sydney have recently gone up, Mr Speaker. They have recently gone up. We’ve seen in July a substantial increase and we’ve also seen in 2016 an increase.
The years prior we saw some decreases. But nothing like the 100%increase we saw under Labor. As thePrime Minister said, we are cleaning up Labor’s mess. Their failure to heed the warnings.
But what Frydenberg is attempting to deftly avoid is a repeat of his words from yesterday, where he said:
The data published by the Australian Energy Regulator on May 2017 in the state of the energy markets report shows between the start of the Coalition government in 2013 prices across average Sydney households on standing offers varied from increasing by $1 to falling by $473. I call on the leader of the opposition to come to the House and correct the record.”
5.17am BST
05:17
Labor is seizing on Josh Frydenberg’s claim in the house on Wednesday that power prices had gone down.
Emma Husar calls Frydenberg to answer whether he “honestly expects households in my electorate to believe that compared to 2013 their power bills had gone down by more than $470 per year?”
Frydenberg returns to his earlier attack that Labor misrepresented the energy regulators and links it to the Mediscare campaign
The Leader of the Opposition sent out a tweet, Mr Speaker, saying that the Liberals have delivered power bills that have been more than $1,000. Well, we’ve heard from the Australian Energy Market Commission and the Australian Energy Regulator that that is false.
This reminds us of the Mediscare Mr Speaker, the shameful Mediscare lie.
Come to the Despatch Box. Come clear with the Australian people. Stop the deceit, stop the lies the falsehoods, to correct the record and tell theAustralian people that he has been telling falsehoods and deceiving them.
5.15am BST
05:15
Gareth Hutchens was listening into the joint committee questioning ASIC officials and has an update on the revelations over Stuart Robert’s business dealings, reported by Fairfax Media’s Latika Bourke today.
Here is a transcript of what went down in the committee just a short time ago.
Matt Keogh, Labor: Presently there’s no ID check requirement for someone becoming a company director, is that right?
John Price, ASIC commissioner: That is correct.
MK: And at the moment if you want to update who is a director of a company on the company register that’s done by form 484?
JP: It is,that’s correct
MK: Do you share the tax commissioner’s concern that it’s possible to appoint a person, in terms of updating the company register, without their knowledge?
JP: Ah so that could only occur through a registered agent. A registered agent is someone that a company nominates on its behalf who can make changes related to that particular company.
MK: So it can happen?
JP: Ah, it can happen.
MK: Okay.
JP: But it would be, I should say, if it is happening it may indicate some misconduct, so it’s an area that we’d..
MK: Yes I’ll get to that. So that can be done through the electronic version of form 484, through the portal?
JP: That’s correct. Through a registered agent.
MK: And to do that, you need to be as you said a registered agent and have their login details?
JP: Correct.
MK: So in theory, if someone else has someone’s, a registered agent’s login details, they can complete that form, appoint somebody as a director without that person’s knowledge.
JP: Yep
MK: And it would appear that that registered agent had submitted the form?
JP: Ah yes, that is possible
MK: And that person’s name would come up as the lodging party.
JP: Yep
MK: But legally, a director’s consent is required in order to be appointed as a director?
JP: Ah yes, that’s correct
MK: Okay. And if that is not obtained it’s a criminal offence under Section 201d of the Corporations Act, is that right?
JP: I’m not sure about 201d of the Corporations Act, but I think knowingly lodging a false or misleading document you may find is an offence under Section 1308.2
MK: 1308.2 of the Corporations Act
JP: Correct
MK: Which carries a maximum term of imprisonment of five years.
JP: A maximum term of imprisonment
MK: So if somebody did that, if they lodged a form either as the agent but there was no consent, or they lodged the form using somebody else’s details then they would be breaching that criminal provision
JP: Yes, if you could prove that the particular person caused the lodgement of the false document. If you could prove that.
MK: Yes. Are you aware of the Fairfax reporting today that the father of Stuart Robert MP was unaware of his appointment as a director of Robert International Pty Ltd?
JP: I did read that newspaper article.
MK: And will ASIC be investigating that?
JP: I think we’ll make some inquiries into that. Yes.
MK: Which may not necessarily constitute a formal investigation under the ASIC Act.
JP: Correct.
MK: Thank you. We look forward to seeing what comes of that maybe in due course
5.13am BST
05:13
Labor has picked up on Latika Bourke’s latest report into Stuart Roberts business affairs and has asked ASIC officials about whether or not someone could be signed up as a company director without their knowledge.
I wrote to the ASIC Commissioner today about my concerns over how easily someone can be signed up as a company director. pic.twitter.com/CUjDT4z6YK
5.12am BST
05:12
Paul Karp
Immediately before Senate question time, Labor’s Sam Dastyari, has gone on a bit of a tear in the chamber about the Coalition’s media deal with the Nick Xenophon Team.
Dastyari describes the concessions won by NXT as a “$60m slush fund for iPads and iPhones”.
He said it sets a bad precedent of horse-trading that Xenophon has decided something as significant as the future of the media landscape by “whether they’re buying you off well enough”.
Dastyari said on the surface concessions may look “fantastic” but “there’s nothing there”. “It’s a dirty deal done cheap.”
Dastyari also said that communications minister, Mitch Fifield, concedes privately he couldn’t possibly do anything to fund the Guardian or it won’t get past the Coalition backbench.
5.09am BST
05:09
The Coalition is so ready to do battle, Ann Sudmalis has been inspired to smack her desk.
Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull’s first dixer reveals the government’s message for the day:
As we’ve seen from today’s job data, our commitment to jobs and growth is not a slogan, it’s an outcome.
Strong jobs’ growth. But to continue that 325,600jobs in the last 12 months. But to maintain that strong growth Australians need...Australians need affordable, reliable electricity.
And the only party who can do that, of course, is the Coalition
Updated
at 5.10am BST
5.06am BST
05:06
It’s time for question time and the government MPs are looking particularly ready to go into battle - Malcolm Turnbull’s (unusual) pre-question time pep talk must have paid off.
Mark Butler is first on his feet, with a question for Josh Frydenberg on...energy. Just for something different.
Can the minister confirm that yesterday he claimed in the House and I quote, since the start of the coalition government in 2013 prices across average Sydney households on standing offers have varied from increasing by $1 to falling by $473”.
Is this Liberal Government so out of touch that they believe power prices have gone down since they were elected? If so, does the minister want to spend the next three minutes claiming that working families in Australia have never been bet other off?
Frydenberg accuses him of having “some cheek”.
In this House he told a falsehood, He told a falsehood. Let me first deal with his question. We have tabled information in the Parliament to indicate that as of July 1 we saw power bills increase in Sydney, AGL increased it by $296, Origin increased it by $310.
Energy Australia by $320. If you look back in the years since we came to government you saw big drops, for example, when we abolished the carbon tax, Mr Speaker. Now, we abolished the carbon tax. Now, the member for Port Adelaide should know that. He put out a news letter, Mr Speaker. He put out his own newsletter which said the decision to terminate the carbon tax will save the average family around $380. Mr Speaker, so that is what he said. We know and the Prime Minister.. knows that the ACCC has confirmed the average Australian household has saved overall about $550 from the abolition of the carbon tax. We have said, we have said that power prices have increase.
We are working to do everything we can to put downward pressure on power prices. The Australian people are rightly concerned about power prices, but not the Leader of the Opposition.
4.59am BST
04:59
Lunchtime politics
Today has the usual ‘last day of the sitting fortnight’ malaise, with not a lot of spring in the step of our MPs.
Still we have learnt somethings:
A deal is all but done on the media reforms, but a vote is still to happen
The Lionel Murphy papers have been released
Anna Burke’s official Speaker portrait has been unveiled
The Liberal and Nationals in favour of the yes vote in the marriage equality campaign have launched their campaign
The unemployment minister has remained steady at 5.6%
The energy market regulator wants a ‘day ahead’ mechanism
The government is picking up the legal tab for former ABCC boss Nigel Hadgkiss
4.40am BST4.40am BST
04:4004:40
Question time gee up?Question time gee up?
Government whip Nola Marino has sent an email out to all MPs calling for all members - including Ministers - to attend a “pre-Question Time briefing with the Prime Minister” according to our sources. Government whip Nola Marino has sent an email out to all MPs calling for all members - including Ministers to attend a “pre-question time briefing with the prime minister” according to our sources.
UpdatedUpdated
at 4.41am BST at 5.20am BST
4.39am BST4.39am BST
04:3904:39
Employment Minister Michaelia Cash looked chuffed to be able to deliver some OK news this afternoon.Employment Minister Michaelia Cash looked chuffed to be able to deliver some OK news this afternoon.
The government is pleased the unemployment rate has remained steady at 5.6%.The government is pleased the unemployment rate has remained steady at 5.6%.
There is some very, very good news for Australians. Since the Coalition was elected to office in September 2013, the economy has now created in excess of 800,000 jobs.There is some very, very good news for Australians. Since the Coalition was elected to office in September 2013, the economy has now created in excess of 800,000 jobs.
In the last12 months alone, the economy has created in excess of 325,000 jobs. Compare that to the last 12 months of the former Labor government when the economy created approximately 80,000 jobs. In the last 12 months alone, the economy has created in excess of 325,000 jobs. Compare that to the last 12 months of the former Labor government when the economy created approximately 80,000 jobs.
The economy under the Turnbull Government is outstripping Labor in terms of jobs growth4-to-1. But there is further good news for Australians. In terms of full-time employment, we have now seen the strongest eight months in a calendar year in terms of full-time employment ever. The economy under the Turnbull government is outstripping Labor in terms of jobs growth four-to-one. But there is further good news for Australians. In terms of full-time employment, we have now seen the strongest eight months in a calendar year in terms of full-time employment ever.
In the last 12months ago, the economy has now created approximately a quarter of a million full-time jobs. Compare that to the last 12 months of the former Labor government where full-times job growth in Australia went backwards by approximately 22,000jobs. In the last 12months ago, the economy has now created approximately a quarter of a million full-time jobs. Compare that to the last 12 months of the former Labor government where full-times job growth in Australia went backwards by approximately 22,000 jobs.
In terms of the participation rate, we saw it tick up slightly this month.In terms of the participation rate, we saw it tick up slightly this month.
The good news that means Australians are out there and what they are saying is, ‘I am ready, I am willing, and I am able to work for you’. The good news that means Australians are out there and what they are saying is: ‘I am ready, I am willing, and I am able to work for you’.
As the Minister for Women,I am delighted the female participation rate has hit an all-time high of 60%. There are now more females participating in the workforce than at any other time inAustralia’s history, in excess of 3million. As the minister for women, I am delighted the female participation rate has hit an all-time high of 60%. There are now more females participating in the workforce than at any other time inAustralia’s history, in excess of 3 million.
In terms of the youth unemployment rate, I have always stood here and said youth unemployment is unacceptably high. I am pleased there is a slight tick downwards but the government remains very, very focused on implementing policies that will get youth off welfare and into work.”In terms of the youth unemployment rate, I have always stood here and said youth unemployment is unacceptably high. I am pleased there is a slight tick downwards but the government remains very, very focused on implementing policies that will get youth off welfare and into work.”
Updated
at 5.19am BST
4.24am BST4.24am BST
04:2404:24
Gareth HutchensGareth Hutchens
The corporate regulator has responded to a worrying claim by a UBS banking analyst that there could be $500bn worth of “factually inaccurate” mortgages sitting on the books of Australia’s banks.The corporate regulator has responded to a worrying claim by a UBS banking analyst that there could be $500bn worth of “factually inaccurate” mortgages sitting on the books of Australia’s banks.
UBS banking analyst Jonathan Mott warned this week that one third of Australians who took out a mortgage in the past 12 months were not “completely factual” with their financial information.UBS banking analyst Jonathan Mott warned this week that one third of Australians who took out a mortgage in the past 12 months were not “completely factual” with their financial information.
He warned the level of factually inaccurate mortgage applications has risen significantly since 2015, from 27% to 33%.He warned the level of factually inaccurate mortgage applications has risen significantly since 2015, from 27% to 33%.
But Michael Saadat, from the Australian Securities and Investments Commission, has just told a parliamentary committee that he thinks Mott’s analysis is incorrect.But Michael Saadat, from the Australian Securities and Investments Commission, has just told a parliamentary committee that he thinks Mott’s analysis is incorrect.
Saadat said Mott’s concerns may have been more pertinent a few years ago, but the quality of mortgages had improved in recent years.Saadat said Mott’s concerns may have been more pertinent a few years ago, but the quality of mortgages had improved in recent years.
4.10am BST
04:10
But it wasn’t all fun and games- Labor’s Tanya Plibersek spoke of the amount of time parliamentarians have to spend away from their families, making sure Anna Burke’s children knew how often she thought and spoke of them.
Updated
at 4.47am BST
4.06am BST
04:06
Ain’t no party like a Speakers’ party...
4.05am BST
04:05
A milestone in the halls of parliament - the second female Speaker Anna Burke (after Joan Childs) became the first woman office holder who’s official portrait was painted by a woman.
4.00am BST
04:00
Frydenberg said Labor had “concocted” the figure and was “designed to mislead the Australian people”.
Let me tell the House that the leader of the opposition’s $1,000 claim for an electricity price increase for the average Sydney household is false. It’s dishonest and it is designed to deliberately mislead the Australian people.
And it has wrongly asserted data from Australia’s independent Australian Energy Regulator which was designed to deceive the Australian people.”
Labor said the claim came from information published in the Australian earlier year.
Frydenberg said the regulator had confirmed it had “not published any data outlining the price increases claimed in the article”.
The price increases in the article are inconsistent with the data published by the Australian Energy Regulator.
This data suggests the prices have gone down in Sydney by 2.3% from the end of 2013 to July 2017.
He said the average Sydney household power bill had varied from increasing from $321 to decreasing by $177 since the Coalition had come to power.
Labor’s Mark Butler was VERY pleased to reply.
They have got to be kidding. They have got to be kidding. The last time they had overreach like this was when John Howard said ‘under Work Choices, workers have never had it better’. Remember that? Billboard after billboard after billboard like that destroyed your government, because of that arrogance, being so out-of-touch that you do not understand what is happening in households across the country.
This minister came into the parliament yesterday afternoon and said this effectively, to the 2.5 million Sydney households, ‘You’ve never had it so good.’ He came into this house and said to 2.5 million Sydney householders that under the Coalition government power prices have decreased by as much as $473. This minister said $473 is the cash that Sydney householders have in their pocket because of the cuts to Sydney power bills.
After gagging the debate, the government won on the numbers.
Updated
at 4.16am BST
3.55am BST
03:55
Paul Karp
The parliamentary group of Liberals and Nationals for yes has just held a press conference, after issuing this joint statement urging a yes vote in the postal survey
Simon Birmingham, Kelly O’Dwyer, Nigel Scullion and Darren Chester all had their say.
They had different emphases but a common theme was commitment and the importance of marriage, with Birmingham saying it “strengthens individuals, families, and society” and O’Dwyer describing it “the expression of strong and committed relationships”.
Scullion had a particularly strong line that “you can’t have two sorts of equal” – a line that both rebutted the idea same-sex partnerships could be equal without marriage and recalling the “separate but equal” fallacy used to defend segregation.
Chester, the only Nationals MP or senator on the statement, said the Australian people were both ready and “looking forward” to making a decision on the issue that had “divided” the parliament.
The attorney general, George Brandis, was grilled about an email the Nationals senator Matt Canavan sent on behalf of the Coalition for Marriage in which he said:
The Liberal National party is proud to stand with the Coalition for Marriage, the organisation running the no campaign. As our president Gary Spence has said, the LNP believes that there should be no change to the definition of the Marriage Act.
Asked if the LNP supported the no case, Brandis responded:
That’s a matter for the organisation. I’m not aware of that. The views of individual Queensland members of the Liberal and National parties are a matter for them ... on my side of politics we respect the right of the parliamentary wing to have a different view to the organisational wing ... I’m not going to comment on matters for the party organisation in Queensland.
Asked about whether they would respect the outcome if the vote is no, Birmingham replied:
It’s important to respect the Australian people ... we’re giving everyone a say, we want to see a high turnout, a big participation and we want to respect that outcome.
Updated
at 4.52am BST
3.34am BST
03:34
A slightly unexpected move by the government in the Bill Shorten should be condemned motion.
Govt just gagged its own motion condemning Labor! Come on @JoshFrydenberg tell us some more how power prices going down!
Updated
at 3.46am BST
3.21am BST
03:21
Media reforms are back up for debate
The Senate has cleared its morning schedule a little bit faster than expected and has returned to the media reform debate.
3.19am BST
03:19
John Howard is keeping up the pressure on the Coalition in regards to religious freedoms in the marriage equality debate.
He has already, as Paul Karp points out, said this before. More than once.
Repeating the demand in a statement, Howard said the case for protections is “compelling”.
This issue must be addressed before the survey is completed; leaving it as something to be taken up only in the event of a Yes vote prevailing is the equivalent of saying that it does not matter. If a Yes vote is recorded there will be overwhelming pressure to “move on”, legislate as quickly as possible and then put the issue behind parliament. There will be scant opportunity for serious consideration of protections in the areas I have cited. Very likely, those raising such matters will be met with a chorus of put-downs and accused of attempting to frustrate the verdict of the people.
Thus far, the government’s response has been to wash its hands of any responsibility, merely stating that it will facilitate a private member’s bill. On the evidence to date, it would seem that the only protections in that bill will not go much beyond stipulations that no minister, priest, rabbi or imam will be compelled to perform a same-sex marriage ceremony.
Those campaigning for a Yes vote call any reference to these issues “red herrings” or distractions. On the contrary, they are legitimate concerns. It is completely disingenuous to assert that a change of this magnitude to a fundamental social institution does not have consequences. It is precisely because parliament should reflect the will of the people that the people are entitled to know what, if anything, the government will do on protections before they vote. Otherwise, people will not be fully informed when they vote.
Updated
at 3.36am BST
3.15am BST
03:15
The energy market operator wants a “day ahead” mechanism
Katharine Murphy
As Amy has already mentioned, the energy official that the Sydney broadcaster Alan Jones likes to refer to as “that woman” – Audrey Zibelman – has fronted a parliamentary committee in Canberra.Zibelman’s agency, the Australian Energy Market Operator, has washed up in the centre of Canberra’s energy policy debate courtesy of a recent report that attempts to quantify Australia’s requirements for dispatchable power once the ageing coal plants (we’re looking at you, Liddell) start to leave the system.
It’s pretty obvious from her outing that Aemo would like the government to develop a new market mechanism that ensures there are sufficient quantities of dispatchable power available in the market at all times.
In her evidence this morning, Zibelman floated the creation of a day ahead market – where the market operator identifies the energy demand for the next day, hour by hour, then generators bid in to supply the market. She thinks that would create more certainty in the market. She wants, in essence, a market around reliability. A day ahead market would also allow the market operator to deploy tools like demand management if there wasn’t availability in the system.
She also, in the politest possible way, would like the government to get cracking on resolving the energy policy quagmire. In order to have her desired system up and running by 2018, Zibelman said she needed a decision out of government in the next eight or nine months. She notes (with admirable understatement) that the market is current “quite anxious”, given all the uncertainty.
Zibelman in her evidence described an energy market in the middle of a profound transition.
She says people in the electricity market used to think in decades but now whole revolutions happen within a period of 18 months. This dynamic environment makes it hard for companies to make investments in assets that take eight or ten years to build, like base load power plants. She says the future is building assets like gas peaking plants, where capacity can switch on and off as required.
She also notes that investors need policy certainty. This, she says, is a “given”. Investors need the certainty of a clean energy target, she says, but the market operator needs something beyond this: it needs to be sure that power generators and retailers can meet daily and future demand. She said that, at the moment, the market is providing incentives for renewables, and that’s fine, but right now the market also needs to signal for reliability and dispatchability.
She said a portfolio solution was required – policies to reduce emissions, policies to ensure that there is enough dispatchable capacity in the market at any given time.
Zibelman says a bit of “mindfulness” is required.
Never a truer word.
Updated
at 3.39am BST
3.10am BST
03:10
The energy minister, Josh Frydenberg, is moving a motion condemning the opposition leader, Bill Shorten, for a claim Labor has made all week – that Sydney power bill prices have increased by $1,000.
He is quite energised about it.
Updated
at 3.39am BST