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You can find the current article at its original source at https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/live/2017/oct/26/coalition-defends-michaelia-cash-after-admission-over-awu-raids-leak-politics-live
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Turnbull says Michaelia Cash 'acted entirely properly' over leak of AWU raid – politics live | Turnbull says Michaelia Cash 'acted entirely properly' over leak of AWU raid – politics live |
(35 minutes later) | |
6.36am BST | |
06:36 | |
A bit more from that Shorten speech: | |
But I have to say, and I don’t mind admitting this, even as leader of the opposition: when member for Wentworth rolled the former prime minister, I thought my job would get harder but I actually thought politics would get better. I think the Australian people thought it was a chance to put some faith and hope back into politics. But the prime minister, by all his actions ever since that event two years ago, has systematically destroyed the faith and hope of people who thought he would be better than what he has turned out to be. And what we know is that the Prime Minister has a particular style of destruction. When all else fails him, he chases his opponents: | |
· Ask Peter King, the former member for Wentworth | |
· Ask Brendan Nelson | |
· Ask Tony Abbott | |
· Ask Kevin Rudd | |
Well, I just want to advise the government on this fact: Australians have worked this prime minister out. | |
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at 6.39am BST | |
6.29am BST | 6.29am BST |
06:29 | 06:29 |
The sitting schedule for next year has just been decided on. | |
The govt just tabled next year’s sittings schedule. #auspol pic.twitter.com/iLKGvhI1YG | The govt just tabled next year’s sittings schedule. #auspol pic.twitter.com/iLKGvhI1YG |
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at 6.31am BST | |
6.28am BST | 6.28am BST |
06:28 | 06:28 |
Kevin Rudd has also weighed in on the Michaelia Cash issue. He was talking to David Speers as part of his book promotion tour and had this to say: | Kevin Rudd has also weighed in on the Michaelia Cash issue. He was talking to David Speers as part of his book promotion tour and had this to say: |
“A warning to Mr Turnbull is, if you are going to try and play macho politics, frankly use the machinery of state to throw at the opposition, be careful of the consequences, my friend.” | “A warning to Mr Turnbull is, if you are going to try and play macho politics, frankly use the machinery of state to throw at the opposition, be careful of the consequences, my friend.” |
6.26am BST | 6.26am BST |
06:26 | 06:26 |
Here is a section of Bill Shorten’s speech following question time: | Here is a section of Bill Shorten’s speech following question time: |
Labor’s criticism of the governments bungled raids is not about the integrity of the AFP, it is about the lack of integrity in this rotten government. And I had to say that yesterday morning, I said these raids were the desperate action of a grubby government, led by quite frankly a grubby prime minister and I repeat that today. This isn’t a throw away line, but because of everything that has happened in the previous 36 hours since I first made that statement, everything this government has done, since yesterday morning, confirms the truth; that Australia has a grubby government and an increasingly grubby prime minister. During question time this point was most clearly illustrated, when the prime minister had a chance to defend Senator Cash, when the opposition moved a resolution condemning her, they did not defend her, they simply gagged the debate. | Labor’s criticism of the governments bungled raids is not about the integrity of the AFP, it is about the lack of integrity in this rotten government. And I had to say that yesterday morning, I said these raids were the desperate action of a grubby government, led by quite frankly a grubby prime minister and I repeat that today. This isn’t a throw away line, but because of everything that has happened in the previous 36 hours since I first made that statement, everything this government has done, since yesterday morning, confirms the truth; that Australia has a grubby government and an increasingly grubby prime minister. During question time this point was most clearly illustrated, when the prime minister had a chance to defend Senator Cash, when the opposition moved a resolution condemning her, they did not defend her, they simply gagged the debate. |
. | . |
6.07am BST | 6.07am BST |
06:07 | 06:07 |
While this day starts to wind down, I am reminded that it was only Monday that we were all talking about the lost security manual. | While this day starts to wind down, I am reminded that it was only Monday that we were all talking about the lost security manual. |
It honestly feels like that happened a year ago. | |
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at 6.31am BST | |
5.54am BST | 5.54am BST |
05:54 | 05:54 |
Barnaby Joyce’s office have sent out a media release a little under 24 hours from when Joyce will learn his fate in the high court. | Barnaby Joyce’s office have sent out a media release a little under 24 hours from when Joyce will learn his fate in the high court. |
The headline? | The headline? |
“Investing in leadership to ‘raise the baa’ across the agriculture sector” | “Investing in leadership to ‘raise the baa’ across the agriculture sector” |
5.48am BST | 5.48am BST |
05:48 | 05:48 |
Some more Mike Bowers magic. | Some more Mike Bowers magic. |
Updated | Updated |
at 5.51am BST | at 5.51am BST |
5.40am BST | 5.40am BST |
05:40 | 05:40 |
Paul Karp | Paul Karp |
The employment estimates committee has agreed to meet again for an extra hearing on Friday, but employment minister Michaelia Cash will be a no show. | The employment estimates committee has agreed to meet again for an extra hearing on Friday, but employment minister Michaelia Cash will be a no show. |
A spokesman for Cash said: “The minister is unavailable due to previous commitments in Perth that day.” | A spokesman for Cash said: “The minister is unavailable due to previous commitments in Perth that day.” |
The hearing can still examine witnesses from the Fair Work Ombudsman and Registered Organisations Commission. | The hearing can still examine witnesses from the Fair Work Ombudsman and Registered Organisations Commission. |
This morning Labor senators hit a brick wall on who the “media source” that tipped off Cash’s senior media adviser, David De Garis, about the AFP raid on the AWU because De Garis refused to tell Cash on Wednesday night who it was, and she hadn’t spoken to him since. | This morning Labor senators hit a brick wall on who the “media source” that tipped off Cash’s senior media adviser, David De Garis, about the AFP raid on the AWU because De Garis refused to tell Cash on Wednesday night who it was, and she hadn’t spoken to him since. |
Cash and De Garis are due to have a conversation this afternoon – but given Labor will not be able to examine her on Friday, it appears Cash is using these “previous commitments” to avoid further scrutiny. | Cash and De Garis are due to have a conversation this afternoon – but given Labor will not be able to examine her on Friday, it appears Cash is using these “previous commitments” to avoid further scrutiny. |
Updated | Updated |
at 5.49am BST | at 5.49am BST |
5.39am BST | 5.39am BST |
05:39 | 05:39 |
In news outside of Michaelia Cash, Labor senator Pat Dodson spoke to the ABC about the government’s reported decision not to back the recommendation for an enshrined Indigenous Voice in Parliament. | In news outside of Michaelia Cash, Labor senator Pat Dodson spoke to the ABC about the government’s reported decision not to back the recommendation for an enshrined Indigenous Voice in Parliament. |
That’s a real kick in the gut to the referendum Council, and certainly a slap in the face of those proponents for the entrenchment of a voice of the Indigenous peoples in our constitution. In other recommendations that have been made over a long time to the government and the Australian people, that go to constitutional reform as well as to legislative responses, for truth telling and for agreement making, and those matters are still afoot, and I would hope that the effort of the prime minister will be to bring people together to see if there’s away forward on such matters. If that doesn’t happen, then not only has the prime minister and the cabinet killed the constitutional proposition, the entrenchment of the voice of Aboriginal people in our Constitution, but the rest of those significant recommendations that would improve our constitution will also lie in abeyance. | That’s a real kick in the gut to the referendum Council, and certainly a slap in the face of those proponents for the entrenchment of a voice of the Indigenous peoples in our constitution. In other recommendations that have been made over a long time to the government and the Australian people, that go to constitutional reform as well as to legislative responses, for truth telling and for agreement making, and those matters are still afoot, and I would hope that the effort of the prime minister will be to bring people together to see if there’s away forward on such matters. If that doesn’t happen, then not only has the prime minister and the cabinet killed the constitutional proposition, the entrenchment of the voice of Aboriginal people in our Constitution, but the rest of those significant recommendations that would improve our constitution will also lie in abeyance. |
Updated | Updated |
at 5.42am BST | at 5.42am BST |
5.35am BST | 5.35am BST |
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Bill Shorten has just finished giving a speech on the Michaelia Cash issue in the chamber. | Bill Shorten has just finished giving a speech on the Michaelia Cash issue in the chamber. |
I’ll bring you some of that in just a moment. | I’ll bring you some of that in just a moment. |
As #qt ends, Bill Shorten calls out: "catch you later Barnaby." | As #qt ends, Bill Shorten calls out: "catch you later Barnaby." |
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at 5.37am BST | at 5.37am BST |
5.19am BST | 5.19am BST |
05:19 | 05:19 |
Kelly O’Dwyer gets a go on the dixer express after all of that to tell us how well the government is working to protect workers’ money. She uses this example of why the government says there needs to be more transparency: | Kelly O’Dwyer gets a go on the dixer express after all of that to tell us how well the government is working to protect workers’ money. She uses this example of why the government says there needs to be more transparency: |
Questions were asked of the former RBA Governor and industry fund director Bernie Fraser in a recent Senate committee inquiry about a payment made by Australian super to the AWU in the 2006-7 financial year, specifically described by the AWU in its 2007 declaration as a donation. The $27,500 payment was made at the same time that the leader of the opposition was the AWU national secretary, and also a director of Australian Super. Alongside Bernie Fraser, current Labor senator Doug Cameron, and former Labor MP Greg Combet. A subsequent donation was subsequently made by, yes, the AWU, to the leader of the opposition’s political campaign in the seeds of Maribyrnong, but it was only when this payment by Australian Super to the AWU in June following reports by the Australian newspaper that the AWU resubmitted its original declaration, changing the very nature of the AWU payment from donation to other receipt on 15 June this year, some 10 years later. What role did the leader of the opposition have in deciding that a payment should be made to his own union when he was both a director of Australian Super and the national secretary of the AWU? What steps did the leader of the opposition take to fully disclose his conflict to the board, and how did he and fellow Australian Superannuation directors satisfy themselves that this was an appropriate use of members’ money? | Questions were asked of the former RBA Governor and industry fund director Bernie Fraser in a recent Senate committee inquiry about a payment made by Australian super to the AWU in the 2006-7 financial year, specifically described by the AWU in its 2007 declaration as a donation. The $27,500 payment was made at the same time that the leader of the opposition was the AWU national secretary, and also a director of Australian Super. Alongside Bernie Fraser, current Labor senator Doug Cameron, and former Labor MP Greg Combet. A subsequent donation was subsequently made by, yes, the AWU, to the leader of the opposition’s political campaign in the seeds of Maribyrnong, but it was only when this payment by Australian Super to the AWU in June following reports by the Australian newspaper that the AWU resubmitted its original declaration, changing the very nature of the AWU payment from donation to other receipt on 15 June this year, some 10 years later. What role did the leader of the opposition have in deciding that a payment should be made to his own union when he was both a director of Australian Super and the national secretary of the AWU? What steps did the leader of the opposition take to fully disclose his conflict to the board, and how did he and fellow Australian Superannuation directors satisfy themselves that this was an appropriate use of members’ money? |
And question time has officially ended. | And question time has officially ended. |
Updated | Updated |
at 5.26am BST | at 5.26am BST |