Sunday 28th of April 2024

heads, we win; tails, you lose .....

heads, we win; tails, you lose .....

from Crikey .....

Put it down to another case of the Perpetual Present to which some members of the Press Gallery are so prone: otherwise intelligent Gallery journalists running the Opposition's talking point that the Government is avoiding parliamentary scrutiny by releasing its carbon pricing package on Sunday.

The Howard Government announced the details of its GST package in August 1998, with no Parliamentary scrutiny whatsoever. It announced its Workchoices package on 9 October 2005, after it had given a special lock-up briefing to employers, at a Prime Ministerial press conference. No statement in Parliament - the House of Representatives wasn't even sitting that week. It announced its media ownership reform package -- the biggest shakeup in media regulation in decades -- in the middle of the winter recess in 1996.

Under the Howard Government, the concept of Parliamentary scrutiny was trashed, particularly in its final term when it controlled the Senate. That was the era of two-day rubber-stamp Senate inquiries.

In all the above cases, of course, there was a subsequent debate -- as there should have been -- over the actual legislation implementing the package. In the media circus that so much of contemporary politics has become, it appears to have been forgotten that Parliament isn't merely about Question Time, or Censure Time as it should now more correctly be known, but about scrutinising and debating bills themselves. Of course, even there the Howard Government couldn't help itself -- not even bothering to print off enough copies of the Workchoices legislation to enable MPs to read it, and springing legislation for the NT intervention so suddenly on both its own and Opposition MPs that they barely had 24 hours to consider it before the Government demanded passage.

And then, of course, there's another point that neither the Opposition nor the Press Gallery has mentioned: the carbon pricing package is the result of the Multi-Party Committee on Climate Change. If the Coalition was so eager to scrutinise the package, they could have joined the Committee at the outset and actually participated in its development.

Perhaps journalists have forgotten that too.

business for carbon price...

A group of more than 50 businesses representing finance, energy, technology and retail have signed a letter supporting a carbon price.

The group, which includes GE, AGL, Ikea and Pacific Hydro, believe the carbon price is critical if Australia is to reduce emissions and ensure the nation remains globally competitive.

The letter comes as lobby groups continue to pressure the Government over what should be included in its carbon package, which will be released on Sunday.

David Waldren from construction company Grocon, which was one of the letter's signatories, says a carbon price is a cost-effective measure that will give business more certainty and deliver jobs in a low-carbon future.

"To transition into a low-carbon economy, there does need to be a restraint put on the emissions of carbon," he said.

"It would seem that pricing that in the form of a tax with the appropriate transition measures in place is the best way to do that in our view".

http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2011/07/06/3262109.htm?section=justin