Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Headlines Wednesday 28th July 2010

=== Todays Toon ===
Admiral Sir David Murray Anderson KCB, KCMG, MVO (11 April 1874 – 30 October 1936) was a naval officer and governor. Anderson served in the Royal Navy from the age of 13 and served in many Colonial wars and was given various Empire postings, rising to the rank of Admiral in 1931. He retired a year later and took up the posting as Governor of Newfoundland, where he also took up the role of Chairman of the Government following the suspension of self-government in the Dominion of Newfoundland. Leaving Newfoundland in 1935, he was appointed as Governor of New South Wales but served only briefly due to his ill health. He died while in office aged 62.
=== Bible Quote ===
“Therefore, since we are surrounded by such a great cloud of witnesses, let us throw off everything that hinders and the sin that so easily entangles, and let us run with perseverance the race marked out for us.”- Hebrews 12:1
=== Headlines ===
Spewing Oil From Another Gulf Well Hampering Cleanup
Pressurized natural gas and oil blasts into the air after boat strikes another oil well in the Gulf of Mexico.

Obama 'View' of History Skips Scouts
Obama will make history as the first sitting president on a daytime talk show when he visits 'The View,' and to do it he'll miss the Boy Scouts' Jamboree marking the group's 100th anniversary

Cops Called Terrorists Over Billboard
Police officers in Bay City, Mich., are being criticized after renting billboard space to oppose the layoffs of five cops, which they say could lead to more shootings, robberies and beatings

Rangel Looking to Cut A Deal in Ethics Flap?
Democratic Rep. Charles Rangel meets with head of House ethics committee amid rumors he may try to work out agreement rather than face ethics charges

Breaking News
Castro to release biography
FIDEL Castro unveiled plans today to release a book in August that includes stories from his childhood and explains how he became a revolutionary.

France declares war on al-Qaeda
FRANCE has declared war on al-Qaeda, and matched its fighting words with a first attack on a base camp of the terror network's North African branch, after the terror network killed a French humanitarian worker it took hostage in April.

Man swallows 85 cocaine condoms
A NERVOUS man boarding a flight in Texas who drew suspicion from customs agents turned out to have swallowed condoms filled with cocaine.

Vatican bans scantily clad tourists
TOURISTS in skimpy summer clothing were being told to cover up before entering Vatican City today.

'No change' to war strategy despite leaks
THE US military's top officer today said information in leaked documents on the war in Afghanistan did not call into question US strategy or Washington's relationship with Pakistan.

Landslide leaves 21 missing
A LANDSLIDE in southwestern China left 21 people missing overnight as torrential rains forced officials to shut boat traffic through the Three Gorges Dam as they braced for a new flood crest.

Apple launches 'magic trackpad'
APPLE overnight unveiled the "Magic Trackpad," a touchpad which allows users to operate a desktop computer with finger gestures, eliminating the need for a mouse.

Facebook helps nab murder suspect
PHILIPPINE police tracked down a suspect in a series of grisly robberies and killings with the help of his Facebook account, officials said overnight.

Bush, Blair slammed over Iraq war
EX-UN weapons inspector Hans Blix questioned overnight the judgment of Britain and the United States in invading Iraq on the basis of evidence of weapons of mass destruction that was clearly "poor".

Swede Larsson sells 1m Kindle books
SWEDEN'S Stieg Larsson is the first author to sell more than one million books in Amazon's Kindle electronic bookstore, the online retail giant said today.

NSW/ACT
Put the dogs on jail staff
SNIFFER dogs should be used to search corrective services officers and their lockers, an ICAC report has recommended.

Drug-banned Sydney doctor appeals
A SYDNEY doctor banned for abusing drugs and contributing to the death of a patient is fighting to become registered in Victoria.

Teen shattered at twin's death
THE twin brother of a teenager killed after being mistaken for a deer on a hunting trip is struggling to come to terms with the accident.

$400m fix for school heaters
CHILDREN have been exposed to a poisonous cocktail of gases belched from school heaters, the State Government admitted.

Meagher exits lobby register
FORMER Health Minister Reba Meagher has taken herself off the State Government's lobbyist register after just two months.

Second gunman ruled out
A MAN shot dead while attempting to hold up an armoured van may have been working alone, police said yesterday.

Eat Street's ban on cars
PARRAMATTA'S main street will be closed to traffic this summer, for a new al fresco dining paradise.

Carpark birth for baby Destiney
A WOMAN was forced to give birth to her daughter in the front seat of her car at a hospital carpark after staff failed to quickly respond.

Grand Final now in the big league
THE NRL will turn this year's Grand Final week into a celebration to rival the AFL's showpiece game.

Police hunt teen girls' sex attacker
A MAN who indecently assaulted two teenage Sydney girls remains at large.

Queensland
Stoppages loom for sugar mills
SEVEN sugar mills are likely to again grind to a halt as 1300 workers threaten stop work action.

Milk fight could push up prices
QUEENSLAND dairy farmers fear a bitter dispute with a Japanese-owned buyer over the price of milk will lead to consumers paying more.

Airport Link firm pays up
THE companies behind the $5.6 billion Airport Link project have been repeatedly fined by Brisbane City Council for violating environmental standards.

Man stabbed five times
A MAN has been rushed to hospital in a serious condition after being stabbed five times at a caravan park on the Gold Coast.

Rail pledge a problem for state
A $1.15 billion federal election promise aimed at winning over crucial marginal seats is set to cause a major infrastructure headache for the State Government.

Labor fear vengeful Rudd
LABOR is petrified that ousted PM Kevin Rudd may be behind embarrassing Cabinet leaks including that Julia Gillard voted against paid parental leave.

Mine faces environment charges
A COPPER mine in northwest Queensland has been charged with 19 offences of failing to meet its environmental obligations.

Taxi fares to rise
TAXI fares in Queensland are set to rise 4.2 per cent at the end of the month following a review by the Department of Transport.

Gillard exploits WorkChoices fears
LABOR has continued to exploit voter fears over industrial relations, with Julia Gillard ramping up the rhetoric against Tony Abbott.

Teen in court over stabbing murder
A COURT has begun hearing evidence in a case against a 14-year-old boy charged with the stabbing murder of a 12-year-old at a Brisbane private school.

Victoria
Masked bandit's golden gun
A MASKED bandit threatened a shopkeeper with a gold-coloured gun this morning before snatching cash and cigarettes.

Roberta wants compo
ROBERTA Williams wants crimes compensation over the jailhouse slaying of her former husband Carl.

Over sized school shock
SCHOOL uniforms are getting larger as children's waistlines expand with some manufacturers now making XXXL shirts.

No train, no pain for soccer visitors
FIFA chiefs enjoyed a hassle-free police escort through Melbourne yesterday as the city's public transport woes hit rock bottom.

Pokies creche for kids
CHILDREN will be able watch parents gamble after a pokies venue was allowed to build a play area with a view of the action.

New freeways lead to boom in housing
THE completion of EastLink and the first home buyers' grant has seen property prices boom in our eastern and south-eastern suburbs.

Explicit sex ed hits schools
AN Education Department booklet encourages students to "brainstorm" lists of explicit sexual practices.

Workers, students too late for excuses
WORRIED workers feared they would be sacked because of Tuesday's train chaos.

Turmoil costs the community $12m
VICTORIA'S economy lost at least $12 million in productivity yesterday because of the train chaos.

Six more months of chaos
UPDATE 6.50am: COMMUTERS should brace for another six months of chaos on the train system as Metro races to replace frayed overhead wires.

Northern Territory
Nothing New

South Australia
Early starts translate well
READING foreign fables and cooking international cuisine is teaching children as young as five crucial literacy skills and helping them get a head start.

Remote control heart surgery success
DOCTORS are performing heart surgery from outside the operating room with a remote robotic system installed at Flinders Private Hospital.

Media banned from SA planning talkfest
ONLY paying customers were allowed to hear updates on SA's major projects from state and local government representatives yesterday.

Unlocking fish love
LOVE is in the air in the Lower Lakes - and the Government is playing Cupid. The Goolwa Barrage will be opened to allow an endangered fish to breed.

Corruption law review 'secretive, rushed'
THE Government's review of anti-corruption laws by Attorney-General John Rau is secretive, rushed and biased towards second best, the Opposition says.

Tooth decay rise in kindies
VOLUNTEER dentists involved in kindergarten visits have found a third of pre-schoolers need some form of dental treatment.

Council battles rezoning
PLANNING Minister Paul Holloway is facing yet another planning backlash - this time by a council in the Supreme Court over his rezoning of the Gawler Racecourse.

Death fear over nailgun attacks
A NAILGUN used in two attacks on northern suburbs buses may have been modified to turn it into a weapon, police believe.

Murder suspects' identity a secret
THE identities of two men accused of murdering Sturt mother Karen Hodgson have been suppressed to allow police to continue their investigations.

Regulators on Peek's trail
POLICE and corporate regulators are circling 80s rockstar Kevin Peek, the man accused of defrauding mostly SA investors of about $90m.

Western Australia
Cops seize three hoon cars
POLICE targeted an underground car club over the weekend, resulting in the seizure of three cars.

Rural Baldivis a distant memory
IF there was ever doubt that the Perth metropolitan area would soon stretch from Two Rocks to Mandurah, it is rapidly being laid to rest.

Today Show gives precious gift to family
A WUNDOWIE mother, whose son is a quadriplegic, is celebrating after winning $25,000 on the Channel 9 Today Show in the Great Cash Giveaway.

'Uncontrolled rage' fuelled attack
THE brutal bashing of a young father was today described as 'uncontrolled rage' just moments after one of his attackers was found guilty of grievous bodily harm.

Two charged over train station brawl
POLICE have charged two people over an assault at the Kenwick Train Station which left a 16-year-old boy in hospital with serious injuries.

Road rage attacker jailed
A 27-YEAR-OLD man has been jailed for almost three years for a hit-run road rage attack which left a grandfather in hospital with serious injuries.

WA hopeful missed the PM change
A WEST Australian Labor candidate has blamed a campaign volunteer for letterboxing material containing photos of former prime minister Kevin Rudd and a glowing endorsement.

Injured woman airlifted to RPH
A WOMAN has been airlifted to Royal Perth Hospital after being freed from a wrecked car near Williams, 160km south of Perth, this morning.

Govt rejects $5.3b 'hoarding claim'
THE West Australian government has denied claims that it is hoarding $5.3 billion from taxpayers while they struggle with record price hikes.

Call for Aboriginal justice probe
FEDERAL Fremantle MP Melissa Parke has called for a Royal Commission into conditions faced by Aboriginal people in the WA justice system.

Tasmania
Elderly woman pulled from house fire
FIREFIGHTERS have rescued an elderly women from her burning house in Hobart's north.

Girlfriend 'too in love' to report murder
THE girlfriend of a Hobart man who murdered a Chinese university student told police she did not report the slaying because she loved her boyfriend too much.

Jet bangs caused by engine surge - report
A SERIES of bangs heard on a passenger plane, which forced it to turn back, were the result of an engine surge.
=== Journalists Corner ===
Marco Rubio Joins Neil on 'Your World'
Out of control spending, soaring debt and unemployment ... Senate candidate Marco Rubio reveals his strategy to get Florida back on track!
===
Countdown to Conflict?
With only days left before Arizona's law takes effect - Greta investigates its impact on the war over immigration!
===
On Fox News Insider
A New Oil Leak in the Gulf
Polygamist Warren Jeffs to Get New Trial
Sen. John Kerry's Tax Troubles?

TOMORROW, July 28th, is the last day for Senators to sign the letter to Secretary Clinton calling for a Commission of Inquiry into crimes against humanity in Burma!

Senator Lautenberg has signed the letter thanks to the phone calls and letters from constituents like you. However, Senator Menendez has not signed on, and we need your help!

Please call Senator Menendez and ask him to sign on to the letter. If you have already called, please call again!

The more Senators who sign the letter, the stronger the message to Secretary Clinton.

Senators do listen to their constituents -- please call and tell your Senators that you want them to support this letter.

Support for an investigation into the regime's crimes against humanity is the first step towards ending sexual violence, forced labor, and the killing of innocent civilians. If we don't shed light on the regime's crimes they will continue with impunity.

This is why Senators Feinstein (D-CA) and Gregg (R-NH) have sent a letter to their fellow Senators asking them to join them in sending a letter to Secretary Clinton to support UN action to investigate the Burmese regime's crimes against humanity.



Democratic governments such as the United Kingdom, Australia, the Czech Republic, and Slovakia already support the call for a UN-led Commission of Inquiry on Burma. Now, we need the United States government to get on board and be a strong voice supporting the establishment of an investigation into crimes against humanity in Burma.



Without the backing of the United States, the Special Rapporteur's call will go ignored! Tell your Senator that the U.S. must support a UN Commission of Inquiry into the regime's war crimes and crimes against humanity. Do not let this opportunity pass by!



With your help, this would be an important step in holding Burma's generals accountable for their crimes against humanity.

Please call Senator Menendez to ask him to sign this important letter.

The Senators only have until July 28th to sign the letter so please call now!




Burma's regime is attacking, killing, raping, and destroying the homes of ethnic minorities. Although these crimes have persisted for decades, the situation has received almost no international attention because the military regime keeps media and international observers away from the areas of attack. These crimes perpetuated by the military have gone on for too long. 
(Read more about crimes in Burma here.)

Online Instructions
=== Comments ===
Is President Obama Losing Mainstream Americans?
THIS IS A RUSH TRANSCRIPT FROM "THE O'REILLY FACTOR," JULY 26, 2010. THIS COPY MAY NOT BE IN ITS FINAL FORM AND MAY BE UPDATED.
LAURA INGRAHAM, GUEST HOST: Now for the top story tonight: President Obama sent a message to liberal activists at one of their conventions in Las Vegas this weekend.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
PRESIDENT OBAMA: Change hasn't come fast enough for too many Americans. I know that. It hasn't come fast enough for me either. And I know it hasn't come fast enough for many of you who fought so hard during the election. What I'm asking you is to keep making your voices heard, to keep holding me accountable, to keep up the fight.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
INGRAHAM: Joining us now from Washington is Brit Hume, Fox News senior political analyst.
So, Brit, first of all, you can tell me where I went wrong on the "Talking Points Memo." Did I capture what's going on in the country? Am I being too harsh on the president? Take a swing at it.
BRIT HUME, FOX NEWS SENIOR POLITICAL ANALYST: Well, so the resistance to this president and his policies has been growing. It was a subset of the American electorate in the beginning, which was -- which didn't like his -- the liberalism it detected, which they thought was too far to the left to suit them. This is, after all, still a center-right country.
But the results of his policies are what has really made the difference, Laura, and the unemployment rate is the key figure here. It remains persistently high, and as long as that was the case, he was destined to lose more and more public support, and that's exactly what's happened. And so he's now in a situation where his policies have not really been strong enough medicine to please his left. And the right and center are alienated by their results as well. And he's in a, politically, in a very bad spot, indeed.
INGRAHAM: Well, I want to get to the Netroots speech he gave via video in a second. But, Brit, he's losing support among pretty much everyone, including some in his own party. Young people are leaving him. Independents in droves are leaving him. White voters, we already know that story. Even Latino support has eroded a little bit. So now he moves on to the Netroots convention, and he addresses the left-wing activists who are kind of getting restless a little bit on the edges. But yet, that is going to simply alienate the very people he needs to bring back in, which are those independents, isn't it?
HUME: Well, you know, it's not clear to me how many people are going to be alienated by the fact that he spoke to them and by the things that he said to them. The people who were going to be alienated by his appeal to the left will be -- are going to be alienated, if they haven't already been, by the policies that the left has desired from President Obama and which in considerable measure he's tried to deliver them. And those people, I think, started to get turned off as, I mentioned early on. That was the birth of the Tea Party movement, really was the spending involved in the bailouts, which were not popular when President Bush started them. They remained unpopular when President Obama continued them. And on top of that, you had the massive stimulus bill, which was promised was going to restrain the unemployment rate, which it has manifestly failed to do, at least not at the levels that were promised. So, you know, you put together the policies that were a little bit too far to the left for the country with results that were appealing to nobody, and this is what you get.
INGRAHAM: Well, Brit, yet, he continues to go back and hit the campaign trail, which is basically what he's doing this week in Detroit and in New Jersey. And it seems like someone in the White House is saying, look, you need to be with your people. You need to talk to them. You need to go on "The View." You need to get in front of the people more and sell your successes.
But in the end, as you said, it's the results. If we have joblessness where it is, if we have public confidence where it is, if we have the sense that America is in kind of a permanent state of decline, as is developing, then no amount of shirt sleeves campaign appearances is really going to change that, right? I mean, you've got to deliver eventually.
HUME: I agree with that. I think that results are always the critical factor in any president's popularity. Ultimately, it's the results that count. But if you're a political adviser to the president, or the president himself, looking for somewhere to start to try to help make matters better, the first thing you might want to do would be to try to stir up some interest in the part of your base.
The enthusiasm of this president's base and the Democratic Party broadly speaking was a tremendous asset to Barack Obama in 2008. That element -- that political element was far more enthusiastic than with the elements that were supporting John McCain and Sarah Palin, despite the fact that Sarah Palin did have a galvanizing effect on a major part of the Republican electorate. The president is simply trying to restore some of that enthusiasm, and that's why you see him at the Netroots convention. That's why you see him out touting the achievements that he has made in the area of health care and certain other areas where he has accomplished some liberal things for liberal causes. You know, I don't know that it's going to work or make that much difference in the end…
INGRAHAM: Yes.
HUME: …but it's probably from his point of view worth trying.
INGRAHAM: I should say that the straw poll, Brit, of the Netroots folks, 87 percent of them generally support the job the president is doing. That's pretty strong, obviously. But only 32 percent say they strongly support what he's doing.
HUME: There you go.
INGRAHAM: And I think that could very well go to the enthusiasm gap that you pointed out.
HUME: Exactly right. That simplifies the problem perfectly. They all still support him, but their enthusiasm for him has diminished, which translates in normal political circumstances into a weaker turnout election. And that is the last thing this president and his party need in this midterm.
The people who support the right, the people who support -- who are angry at President Obama on the right and in the center are highly motivated to vote. The president needs his people to be highly motivated to vote as well. And that Netroots poll gives you a sense of just how many of them are not.
INGRAHAM: Brit, one other point before we let you go. I think there was also a massive miscalculation a year ago about the Tea Party movement. You remember it was kind of a fringe movement? They were very angry, and this -- but this isn't going to last. You can't keep up this emotion for this long. I mean, that was the refrain we heard pretty much everywhere.
I've been in 15 cities in the last, you know, two weeks, basically. And the enthusiasm, the energy, a lot of Tea Party folks showing up in Memphis and Birmingham, New Orleans, these people are not losing their enthusiasm for their kind of change at all.
HUME: Well, that's, Laura, I always thought of the Tea Party movement, whatever its fate, was a token, a sign of intensity in the resistance to President Obama. And nothing that has happened since then has changed my mind about that. I think that's clearly what it is. If the unemployment rate had dropped sharply and times were better, the Tea Party movement might have petered out, but it didn't and the movement hasn't.
INGRAHAM: Brit, great to see you. Thanks a lot.
HUME: Thanks, Laura.
===
HAUNTING CONTINUES
Tim Blair
A magazine makeover turns Julia Gillard into … Cate Blanchett:
Blanchett fanboi Kevin Rudd will be dreadfully conflicted. The leak-denying former Prime Minister spent yesterday campaigning, after a fashion, as Jayne Azzopardi reports:
Kevin Rudd just can’t resist. He’s going to haunt Julia Gillard throughout this campaign, but with such an innocent look in his eye that no one will be quite sure just what he’s up to.

On Tuesday I spent a full hour of my day just following him around a hospital. Nothing new in that - when he was PM I did it all the time, watching as he “had a yak” with patients and staff, and told stories about the time he and his family members had spent working in hospitals over the years. But this time was different. It was just plain weird …

I cornered him in a lift and managed to get him to voice the words, “I support the re-election of the Labor party and the election of Prime Minister Gillard”, but only after asking the question three times.
He’s loving this. Gillard, not so much:
Asked whether her team had enough discipline and unity to govern in the face of continuing leaks, Ms Gillard said: “Give me a break; I’m opposing the third Liberal Leader in this period of Government ... who won his position by one vote.”
That’s one more vote than Gillard received:
A ballot had been called for 9am but Mr Rudd withdrew at the last moment. There was no vote.
===
FROM GERALD TO GILLARD
Tim Blair
Today’s front page pays tribute to a famous line from the Daily News:
===
GANG OF FOUR
Tim Blair
A leftist Fairfax journalist chats with a leftist Labor politician on the leftist ABC, before a hooting leftoid audience:

Highlights: Senator John Faulkner declares (beginning at 37:00): “I think the Prime Minister has worked very, very hard to ensure that his government is re-elected … Kevin Rudd more than matches the alternative Prime Minister in Tony Abbott.” Just a couple of months later – the interview was recorded in May – Faulkner’s party threw Rudd out. Says Faulkner, presciently: “Don’t forget what happened to Gough Whitlam.”

Highlight II. Faulkner: “I reckon Rudd will win.”

The SMH’s Alan Ramsey: “I agree with you. I think he will win.”

Highlight III. Faulkner: “You said on the Saturday of the [2004] election that you thought … Latham could get there.”

Ramsey: “Yes, I did. Absolutely.”

Faulkner: “You had a lot riding on that, didn’t you? You really backed him in …”

Ramsey: “I thought he could win. My word I did … I thought he gave the Labor party some hope. I thought he gave Labor supporters some hope …”

John Howard won with an increased majority.

Highlight IV. Faulkner: “Do you think you lost objectivity?”

Ramsey: “No. I don’t.”
===
OLDSTERS OPPOSED
Tim Blair
Nine Network veteran and Daily Telegraph columnist Laurie Oakes exposes claims that Julia Gillard opposed paid parental leave – and the alleged reason why:
Oakes said Ms Gillard, who was then deputy prime minister, argued that the idea that paid parental leave would be a political winner was being misconstrued. She said people beyond child-bearing age would resent it, as would stay-at-home mothers, Oakes said.

She also allegedly questioned the $14 billion cost of the pension increase on the grounds “elderly voters did not support Labor”.
Who on earth might have leaked such information?

UPDATE. The SMH’s Peter Hartcher:
In public, Ms Gillard has been happy to share credit for the decisions to give more cash for age pensions and parental leave.

But in the inner sanctum of the government, she tried to cut the size of the pension rise and wanted to kill the idea of paid parental leave altogether, telling cabinet colleagues it was being pursued because it was politically correct, according to figures familiar with the debates.
This is potentially election-wrecking. Who in the previous cabinet would reveal these details? What would be the motive?

UPDATE II. Michelle Grattan:
Pro-Rudd forces [are] suspected of leaking damaging claims that [Gillard] argued in cabinet against paid parental leave and questioned the size of a pension rise …

Ms Gillard did not deny the claims last night … ‘’Cabinet discussions are confidential.’’
Evidently not.

UPDATE III. The Courier-Mail:
Senior Labor sources have pointed the finger at ousted former Labor leader Kevin Rudd, and are concerned he has moved from denial to revenge.
You only got one finger left, and it’s pointing at the door …
===
All the Age’s correspondents agree on bad Israel. Or are made to
Andrew Bolt
What very committed staff the Age has on its foreign desk, busily inserting telling words in wire copy:
Britain’s The Daily Telegraph on July 5:
NETANYAHU will come under fierce pressure from Obama to extend a 10-month freeze on Jewish settlements in the West Bank.
The Age reprints the story on July 7 with two extra adjectives:
NETANYAHU was last night expected to come under pressure from Obama to extend a 10-month freeze on the building of illegal Jewish settlements in the occupied West Bank.
Bloomberg reports:
NETANYAHU, whose Likud party supports Jewish settlement in the West Bank . .
The Age version on July 10:
MR Netanyahu, whose Likud party supports illegal Jewish settlement in the occupied West Bank …
(Thanks to reader Michael.)
===
Hirsi Ali on culture
Andrew Bolt

An excellent interview on Lateline with Ayaan Hirsi Ali, who reminds us that people may be equal but ideologies and cultures are not. Islam, for instance, is an ideology that threatens what the West best defends.
===
She’s dancing harder now
Andrew Bolt

Rare footage of Gillard dancing to Joan Kirner’s tune.

(Thanks to reader Spin Baby, Spin.)
===
Who in Labor could possibly be leaking against Queen Julia?
Andrew Bolt
Are you keeping up with the leaks since Kevin Rudd was sacked?
Leak one: Julia Gillard went back on her deal to let Rudd stay on for a couple more months to see if he could turn around the polls. Leaked to Laurie Oakes to hurt Gillard.

Leak two: Rudd has been sounded out for a top job in the United Nations, working on climate change. Leaked to make Rudd seem too important to ignore.

Leak three: Gillard went back on an offer which Rudd “understood” meant he’d be appointed straight away to another Cabinet ministry.Leaked to the Australian’s Dennis Shanahan to hurt Gillard.

Leak four: A confidential diplomatic cable from the New Zealand high commission in Canberra to the New Zealand government, based on a briefing based on “those close to the conversation which occurred between the Prime Minister and Kevin Rudd MP on Sunday (June 27)” claims Rudd “has apparently conveniently forgotten that the ‘deal’ struck in advance of the leadership spill was that he would stand down immediately”. Leaked to the Australian’s Dennis Shanahan to hurt Rudd.

Leak five: Rudd skipped meetings of the powerful National Security Committee, which includes the heads of defence and spy agencies and discusses security threats, and even sent a 31-year-old staffer to fill in for him. Leaked to the ABC’s Chris Uhlmann to hurt Rudd.

Leak six: Childless Gillard actually opposed Rudd’s parental leave scheme in Cabinet and questioned giving more cash to pensioners on the grounds that they were Coalition voters. Leaked to Oakes to make Gillard seem a hypocrite and out of touch.
Is there a pattern here? Any common thread which could help us to identify at least one of the leakers?

One prediction, though: the last four weeks of the campaign could become very, very vicious within Labor’s own ranks.

UPDATE

Former Labor leader Mark Latham had a theory about such leaks to Oakes - one he even tested:
After Laurie Oakes dropped his bomb at the Press Club yesterday, well-thumbed copies of The Latham Diaries were taken off shelves all around Canberra… Political power players turned to page 280 to refresh their memories of the former Labor leader’s account from April 14, 2004, of how he used Rudd’s fondness for the media to set a trap.

“I’ve had a suspicion for some time now that Rudd has been feeding material to Oakes,” Latham wrote. “Decided to set him up, telling Kevvie about our focus groups on Iraq.”

No focus groups had been held. All the then-Labor national secretary, Tim Gartrell, had done was quantitative polling. Yet Labor focus group research was cited in Oakes’s column on April 14, 2004.

“Today, right on cue, Jabba has written in the Bulletin: ‘The Labor Party’s polling firm has been busily running focus groups to test the public mood following Latham’s troops-out announcement.”

“Trapped him,” Latham wrote.
UPDATE 2

Reader Agnos Tick:
She’s Welsh. Got to accept a few leeks.
UPDATE 3

Can you imagine what the latest leaker thought when watching the leaders debate on Sunday:
The claim that (Gillard) opposed paid parental leave in cabinet emerged just two days after she used Sunday’s televised leaders’ debate to talk up the government’s scheme, which will offer primary carers 18 weeks’ paid leave at the minimum wage of about $570 a week.

Her allegedly negative stance on the pension boost was also at odds with her positive reference to it during the leaders’ debate, which elicited a positive movement in the ‘’worm’’ meter that tracked TV studio audience responses. ‘’We did a major increase in the pension to help older Australians,’’ she said.
And cue the bitch-fight:
Some in the Labor Party were last night blaming Mr Rudd or his supporters for the leak.

Campaigning yesterday in his electorate, where he has removed references to Labor from promotional posters, Mr Rudd said: ‘’I fully support the re-election of the government and I fully support the election of Prime Minister Gillard.’’…

NSW Labor senator Steve Hutchins said last night’s allegation was a ‘’mischievous disgrace’’ and ‘’smacks of sour grapes....’’ He said he did not believe the content of the leak…

Former Victorian Premier Joan Kirner dismissed the story as rubbish. ‘’Julia and Jenny Macklin argued for paid parental leave, Julia did the tactics and strategy,’’ she said. And former ACTU boss Sharan Burrow said: ‘’I never saw anything other than total support [for paid parental leave] from Julia Gillard … Laurie Oakes must be suffering some sort of relevance deprivation syndrome.
Burrow, never the smartest rabbit in the hutch, might be well advised not to shoot this particular messenger. His gun is much, much bigger.

UPDATE 4

Watch, in Oakes’ report, the clip from the leaders’ debate in which Gillard exploits what she actually questioned.

UPDATE 5

Education and workplace minister Simon Crean gives Rudd a whack:
Mr Crean said yesterday he had repeatedly told Mr Rudd before he was dumped to run a more effective cabinet process.

Mr Crean, who Mr Rudd considered standing against in the Labor leadership ballot in late 2003, was also the first cabinet minister to say publicly that Mr Rudd’s proposed resource super-profits tax was mishandled.

A spokesman for Mr Rudd said yesterday that the former prime minister “does not intend to provide an ongoing response to Mr Crean’s series of remarks"…

On Sunday, Mr Crean issued Mr Rudd another pointed message, telling him his future depended on whether he was prepared to be a team player.

“He can’t be leader. He’s got to accept that,” Mr Crean told the ABC’s Insiders program.

“He’s got to move on and he’s got to play as part of a team,” he said.
UPDATE 6

Gillard admits the latest leaks are right (although she’s silent on having dismissed pensioners as Coalition voters) but says her role is to question big spends:
PRIME Minister Julia Gillard was forced to respond to claims she opposed Labor’s paid parental leave scheme and a cash increase for aged pensioners in a news conference in Adelaide…

“On the question of paid parental leave, I have devoted my adult life through what I have advocated, through who I am, and of course I want to see a pensioner increase and a paid parental leave scheme.”

“I want to make it very clear ... between the pensioner rise and paid parental leave scheme we are talking about expenditure of more than $50 billion over the next 10 years. That’s a lot of money. The question (then) at the forefront of my mind was ‘Are they affordable?’,” Ms Gillard said.

“I believe that is the appropriate approach to take. I understand that some might say if you don’t sign on the dotted line that somehow you lack passion for it. Frankly, that analysis is ridiculous and absurd. So, if people want a prime minister who has $50 billion spending put before them and sign it without question, I am not it. The central thing to ask is: are they affordable?” she said.
Did she also query the sheer scale, waste and rorts of the stimulus spending?

UPDATE 7

Gillard is asked directly if she jibbed against the pension increase on the grounds that they voted Liberal. She flat out denies it.

She is asked whether she resisted the parental leave scheme because stay-at-home mums resented it and older women no longer wanted it. She mocks the idea without directly rejecting it.

UPDATE 8

Apologies. Oakes wasn’t the only one to get the latest leak. The Sydney Morning Herald’s Peter Hartcher was handed the identical information with the identical spin, clearly by the same source or his agent:
JULIA GILLARD privately argued against the generosity of two of the Rudd government’s major increases in welfare payments.

In public, Ms Gillard has been happy to share credit for the decisions to give more cash for age pensions and parental leave.

But in the inner sanctum of the government, she tried to cut the size of the pension rise and wanted to kill the idea of paid parental leave altogether, telling cabinet colleagues it was being pursued because it was politically correct, according to figures familiar with the debates.

As deputy prime minister, Ms Gillard argued that a big rise in the age pension was excessive because ‘’old people never vote for us’’, the sources said.

She was overruled and 3 million aged pensioners received the rise in last year’s budget.

And she was happy to boast about the decision in the televised leaders’ debate on Sunday. ‘’We did a major increase in the pension, to help older Australians particularly, with the pressures that are on them,’’ she said.
Mark Latham has had something to say about Hartcher’s most popular source, too:
A DEFINING feature of Rudd’s prime ministership was his constant briefing of Hartcher on the behind-the-scenes processes behind big decisions, invariably to glorify his own contribution. As one caucus wag told me earlier this year, “Kevin doesn’t change his underpants these days without telling Hartcher about it.”
UPDATE 9

Whoever is leaking has Labor MPs paranoid and at each other’s throats. Tony Wright makes clear that retiring Finance Minister Lindsay Tanner, a Left winger disgusted with Gillard’s supporters, is now under suspicion:
While many suspect an embittered Kevin Rudd or his supporters are somehow behind the leaks, senior Labor MPs and officials privately believe this is far too neat and convenient…

One theory is that enemies of Rudd are working far behind the scenes to place him in the frame - and thus destroy any chance he might have of returning to a senior frontbench position, as promised by Gillard. The theory continues that two or more ambitious Labor MPs are planting leaks that would appear to come from Rudd… One current minister and one less senior Labor MP are suspected by those who place credence in this theory…

The other conspiracy theory under quiet inquiry is that a very senior minister wants to expose Ms Gillard as hypocritical, arguing positions behind closed doors that are far from her old leftist views, and then publicly embracing social policies that others fought for.

The strength of this theory is that only a very senior minister would be privy to conversations during high-level decision-making on such issues as paid parental leave and pension increases.

Its weakness is that such a figure would hardly put in jeopardy the government they serve. It could destroy their own career.

But what if such a figure was so unimpressed by Ms Gillard - and perhaps didn’t mind if Kevin Rudd got the blame - that they had decided their political career was no longer worth pursuing, anyway?
===
Flannery forgets to add he’d gain from what he’s selling
Andrew Bolt
The Age chooses warming alarmist Tim Flannery as one of 10 “leading Australians” to lead “an informed debate about our future”. So Flannery writes:
I have long argued that we should develop a city in the Cooper Basin — a Geothermia — as a hub for minerals processing dependent entirely on clean renewable energy.
There are two things that, yet again, are missing from Flannery’s spruiking of geothermal power and this particular site. First, he is an investor in the geothermal test plant in the Cooper Basin, and, second, his plant has been crippled by technological difficulties. As I noted when I interviewed him on MTR:
Bolt: You’re an investor in geothermal technology , aren’t you?

Flannery: Yeah, I am. Indeed.

Bolt: How come you don’t declare that.

Flannery: Well, I’ve just done it.

Bolt: You just did because I told you. You said that geothermal , which you are in investor of, you’ve got a plant, you’ve invested in a plant in Innamincka and you said the technology was really easy. How come that plant....

Flannery: Not really that easy.

Bolt: Well, yes. It’s actually had technological difficulties and it’s been delayed two years because it’s not that easy, after all, is it?
===
Abbott trumps Gillard’s tax cut
Andrew Bolt
Tony Abbott knocks out Labor’s best economic pitch of the campaign - which was that the Labor, unlike the Liberals, would cut business tax.

Abbott today says he’ll cut business tax not by Labor’s 1 per cent, but by 1.5 per cent.

He’s on a roll this week.

UPDATE
TONY Abbott has emphatically moved to underline the Coalition’s claim to be the party of small business by trumping Labor with the promise of a company tax rate cut.

The 1.5 per cent cut would take the company tax rate to 28.5 per cent as at July 1, 2013, half a percentage point less than that being promised by Labor, and would cost $2.55 billion…

Coalition sources said the timing was partly designed to show voters that while Labor unity was crumbling, the Coalition was moving ahead with new policy plans.
===
Women’s Weekly campaigns for Gillard, despite its one admission
Andrew Bolt
Women’s Weekly, headed by the Left-leaning Helen McCabe, gives Julia Gillard a 13-page advertorial:
Julia Gillard has a welcome free kick in the election campaign today, gracing the cover of the August edition of the Australian Women’s Weekly and making a direct appeal to the magazine’s estimated 2.2 million readers.

It’s handy timing, hitting the newsstands on the same day newspapers are reporting of damaging leaks emerging from within Labor, claiming the Prime Minister was opposed to parts of Labor’s paid parental leave scheme…

But enough of all that - the Weekly has a 13-page spread and 4000-word article featuring Ms Gillard chatting about her politics and her personal life.
McCabe’s writer makes clear the magazine’s collective position from the start:
So, while we wanted to rejoice (at Gillard becoming prime minister) and while we wanted to mark the moment and support the sisterhood by celebrating her promotion, first of all, we wanted to know just a little bit more about her.
And everyone who’s anyone in the Gillard fan club is interviewed - her parents, sister, best friend, former lover and friend, and Cheryl Kernot. (Boyfriend Tim Mathieson is yet again mysteriously absent.)

The photos are gorgeous, and, despite McCabe’s protests that they are untouched, a naughty cleavage has been workshopped out and some skin tones have been balanced.
The single negative for Gillard comes only on the very last of the 13 pages, when the Weekly mentions what almost every journalist will not - that Gillard had a two-year relationship with fellow Minister Craig Emerson, even though he was married with three children:
When asked if Craig was still married when their relationship began, Julia replies: “That’s really a set of issues between Craig and his wife that I really wouldn’t want to canvas...”

The state of Craig Emerson’s marriage at the time, specifically whether he was separated or otherwise estranged from his wife prior to starting the relationship with Julia, is not known.
A very significant issue for many women, I’d have thought, but the Weekly buries it as deep as it can in what’s otherwise a paen of praise.

Compare that effort to the much shorter and less lovingly illustrated profile of Tony Abbott written for the Weekly by McCabe herself back in February, well clear of any election campaign, and stuffed with quotes from critics to make the Liberal leader seem anti-female:
But let’s begin with the Women Weekly’s opening message to readers. Editor-and-Chief Helen McCabe types (p.9):
So, does he [Abbott] have a problem with women? I don’t think so, but there are certainly women who have a problem with him. I suspect the profile (see page 18) won’t change anyone’s opinion about Tony Abbott, but I hope it sheds some light on the alternative prime minister, as we prepare to go [sic] the polls again this year.
Apparently, Rudd is loved by all.

Still, the article is suspiciously political for a supposed neutral magazine. Just listing Abbott’s various positions on (a) abortion – a controversial topic; (b) contraception – a controversial topic; (c) sex before marriage – a controversial topic; (d) “gay marriage” – a controversial topic; (e) IVF for same-sex couples – a controversial topic; (f) piercings – a controversial topic; (g) alcohol – a controversial topic; (h) drugs – a controversial topic….and so on….looks like Catholic-baiting.

Now I’m not certain if The Australian Women’s Weekly is The Labor Party’s Women’s Weekly, but I wonder if Rudd’s various positions have been scrutinised in a similar fashion. So have they?

Bizarrely, the negative words of an unnamed blogger and comments on other so-called women’s websites are used to stress the point: Catholic Abbott is a divisive figure. And we read some anti-Abbott points from the seasonal vegetarian, Mia Freedman, a politically-correct blogger.
UPDATE

Do you think McCabe, given 13 pages to play with, might have found room for just one mention of our Prime Minister’s record? Just one mention, for instance, of the rort-riddled Building the Education Revolution spendathon?

UPDATE 2

Meanwhile, over at the ABC’s taxpayer-funded website The Drum, a pro-Labor outlet edited by Howard-hater Jonathan Green, it’s the same matey group-think:
THE ABC has admitted it should have disclosed links between members of a judging panel and Sustainable Population Minister Tony Burke.

The broadcaster used the panel to assess the televised leaders’ election debate

A seven-person panel of debating experts scored the debate between Julia Gillard and Tony Abbott 7-0 for the Prime Minister.

Two members of the panel that rated the debate for the ABC’s commentary website The Drum, Ray D’Cruz and Ben Richards, founded a public speaking consultancy, Aticus Pty Ltd, with Mr Burke in 1997.

Mr Burke acknowledged Mr D’Cruz and Mr Richards in his maiden speech in parliament in 2004.
(Thanks to reader Max.)
===
Another Labor “stimulus”: too late, too much and too rorted
Andrew Bolt
Last year’s recession threat was actually just an excuse for yet another Labor splash-up:
JULIA Gillard has been forced to defend her government against allegations of pork-barrelling after a damning audit report found a key part of its stimulus program favoured Labor electorates and was delivered too late to protect the economy from the global financial crisis.
Much as Gillard’s rort-ridden Building the Education Revolution spendathon is still spending billions to stop a recession which was meant to hit last and is now long gone. But the bottom line here:
The Auditor-General’s report on the $550 million strategic projects part of the Regional and Local Community Infrastructure Program ...(shows) the approval rate for these projects in Labor-held seats was 42.1 per cent, while the corresponding figure for Coalition seats was 18.4 per cent.
UPDATE

Back to rorts over which Gillard herself directly presided, and finally stories of massive waste in the Building the Education Revolution are being uncovered in Victoria, too - this time involving rorts to benefit union:
BUILDERS, architects, councils and school principals have delivered a damning report card on Julia Gillard’s school building program in her home state, including allegations of rorting, long delays, inflated costs and inept management.

A Victorian parliamentary inquiry into the implementation of the $16.2 billion Building the Education Revolution program has revealed for the first time the extent of the discontent among Victorian principals.

More than 50 submissions were made to the Education and Training Committee inquiry—initiated by opposition parties in the upper house—in which schools raised complaints about being kept in the dark, extensive delays over projects, and not knowing whether they were getting value for money, because the Victorian government has refused to release project costs to the public…

Building companies and architects raised concerns about the program failing to use local tradesmen and stimulate regional economies, management of the projects being taken out of the schools’ hands and builders losing thousands of dollars while construction sites lay empty waiting for planning permits… (A) major building company hired to carry out works on 33 schools told the inquiry that construction costs were inflated and the building permit fees were “considerably higher than we normally pay”.

BDH Constructions managing director Henry Bongers said: “The designs of most of the templates would be some of the most expensive we have been involved with on a square-metre basis mainly due to the shapes and structural design."…

Another builder, Vaughan Constructions, described as “rorting” the practice of bundling individual projects into a single, large contract to enable workers to be paid an additional hourly site allowance....

The Masters Builders Association of Victoria also expressed concerns about the cost of building permits, which it says blew out to four times greater than normal in Western Victoria....

Bannockburn Primary School council president Les Rowe wrote in his school’s submission: “Our building is to be the same size as a school portable yet is costed at least three times this amount.”
Then there’s this accident - which can’t be blamed on Gillard, yet seems dangerously symbolic:
A building frame for a $1 million outdoor learning centre in southern New South Wales has come tumbling down.
The structure collapsed at Kooringal Public School in Wagga Wagga yesterday. The building project is funded under the Federal government’s Building the Education Revolution (BER) scheme.
===
Why does being green hurt so much?
Andrew Bolt
Terry McCrann on the mad greening of Victorian Premier John Brumby:
John Brumby has declared war on every Victorian.

He now wants to triple your power bills to go with the soaring cost of your water. The first, thanks to the promise to close part of the Hazelwood power station. The second, because of the government’s decision to go for high-cost - and energy-intensive - desalination over a new dam.

That’s of course if you could actually get the power and water. Because a Brumby future will guarantee brown-outs and black-outs, as the state’s traditionally safe and cheap power is sacrificed on the Dark Green altar of ‘climate change’…

Brumby has committed his government to the utterly pointless task of cutting the state’s greenhouse gas emissions by 20 per cent in just 10 years.

Apart from the rather basic fact that is literally impossible unless he was prepared to actually cut off power - to turn the state ‘North Korean dark’. There is no way you could build ‘alternative’ energy in that time…

A 20 per cent cut in the state’s emissions is actually a 40 per cent cut in our per capita emissions, given our likely population growth.

How is this supposed to be achieved? By closing a quarter of Hazelwood and ‘providing’ all our future power growth with wind and solar. Especially, it seems solar - Brumby wants Victoria to become the ‘solar state’.

Now solar is even more useless and at least four times as costly as wind. Indeed in comparison it makes wind look almost like reliable base-load power.
===
Wicked witch
Andrew Bolt
There’s a lot more of them about, as we retreat from reason. This latest witch is from Geelong:
A “WITCH” told a traffic cop she was above the law because she was “from another world” before dragging him at high speed down a busy street…

De Avalon, 40, a marriage celebrant who is also a self-confessed witch from the Geelong suburb of Highton, had initially been stopped after she was seen using a mobile phone.

“When asked to produce her driver’s licence, De Avalon replied that she did not have one,” Sen-Constable Lamb said.

“When asked why not, she said, ‘I’m a being from another world and don’t require one.’ When asked to state her name and address De Avalon replied, ‘I have a universal name that is not recognised here’.”

Sen-Constable Lamb said that when asked for ID, De Avalon said, “Your laws and penalties don’t apply to me. I’m not accepting them, I’m sorry, I must go, thank you.
(Do not comment on this case, please. De Avalon has pleaded guilty to various charges, including recklessly causing serious injury, dangerous driving and driving while suspended, but still awaits sentencing.)

So many witches do we now have that a local newsagency stocks two magazines to cater to them:
===
The real car wreck is Gillard’s bucks for bombs
Andrew Bolt
ALL you need know about Julia Gillard’s “cash for clunkers” promise is that it’s another green scheme.

Forget for a second the preposterous details of the Prime Minister’s plan to pay motorists $2000 for their junk-on-wheels if they promise to buy a new green car instead.

No real need to know more, since you’ve been bitten so often by such green pets that you must know you’re about to be chomped again.

After all, with every government it’s the same. If it’s sold as green, it will cost more than they say, deliver less than they promise, and will probably be riddled with rorts to boot.

Think of the Rudd Government’s insulation batts fiasco, sold as a green fix to global warming, only to become a honey pot for every con artist from Karachi to Bondi.

Think of the Green Loans scheme or the solar hot water rebates - both scrapped, too, after being rorted until we bled.

Same deal at a state level. Think of those monstrous wind farms, producing less green electricity than advertised, and so spasmodically that the nation’s entire wind-generated power supply at times falls to near zero.

Or think of Victoria’s desalination plant, sold as the green alternative to a dam, yet costing taxpayers not the first-advertised $3.1 billion but since-admitted $5.7 billion - four times the price of a dam for just a third of the water.

Or take the collapse of the NSW Greenhouse Gas Abatement Scheme, drained of millions by carpetbaggers who pushed boxes of free low-energy light bulbs and low-flow shower nozzles on to don’t-care customers to cash in on the fists full of over-priced abatement certificates they got in exchange.

Just why green schemes are so prone to flop or be fleeced is no coincidence. The word “green” - or “sustainable” - is like holy water. Sprinkle it on a sinner and even the greatest con man becomes redeemed.

It then becomes almost evil to question the sales pitch, or do the most basic value for money check.

And so we now see, with Gillard’s cash-for-clunkers, a promise so absurd that this one election promise should disqualify her from the management of our $1 trillion-a-year economy.

Let’s check it out, so you can gain an insight into the irrationality of the green faith, and the tragic idiocy of our times that such things become key election promises.
===
The return of DIY moralism
Andrew Bolt
THERE is, thank God, one promise in this dead-hearted election to lift the heart of every serious moralist.

By “serious”, I don’t mean the kind of moralists who now plague us in their tens of thousands, demanding more from others than they give themselves.

You know the sort. They’re the ones who go to free Make Poverty History concerts to demand taxpayers give to Africa what they themselves wouldn’t even fork out for the band.

They’re the ones who paid nothing for the Live Earth concerts where they screamed for the rest of us to cut down on the petrol they wasted to get there and on the electricity the musos needed by the megawatt for their amps.

These are the “awareness raisers” and finger-waggers whose fast track to sweatless goodness lies in denouncing everyone else as evil.

So it was with relief I heard Opposition Leader Tony Abbott make a small offer to noisier elements of this damn-everyone-else-but-me crowd.

The refugee activists so keen to deplore fellow citizens as heartless and racist will, under the Liberals, be given the chance to prove how morally superior they truly are - not by mere words, but louder deeds.

Abbott will let them sponsor the entry of an extra 1250 refugees, provided they stump up a bond to guarantee their guests will pay their own way.

Now that would make such moralisers serious indeed. Or show them not to be.

Abbott isn’t the first to think of such a wheeze, of course. Queensland’s Bligh Government last year called out the kind of greens who blithely demand the rest of us light our homes with nothing more than fireflies.

From now on, Premier Anna Bligh sweetly suggested, such noble people could, if they wished, demonstrate the way to utopia by making the tiniest of sacrifices of their own.
===
Another job for the First Bloke?
Andrew Bolt
Experts claim Julia Gillard’s $277 million mental health package, unveiled yesterday, won’t help that many people:
The Rudd government’s former mental health adviser John Mendoza called it “a scattergun approach that will not really change the fundamentals"… Australian of the Year and mental health advocate Patrick McGorry said Ms Gillard “just seems to have contacted the same old advisers and rolled out a policy that is just a drop in the ocean”. University of Adelaide professor of psychiatry Jon Jureidini said the plan to send outreach teams to schools affected by suicide could be harmful.
But one person, at least, may get something out of it - Gillard’s boyfriend, Tim Mathieson, the hairdresser who has already been appointed a men’s health ambassador by Labor’s Health Minister:
Later, after Ms Gillard announced her mental health policy, The Australian asked if Mr Mathieson would have a role in its implementation, considering the focus would be on men’s health.

“Tim’s in a position to give an ordinary person’s perspective about these issues,” she said.

“You can get a man who is not a doctor or a researcher or someone with a big title but (you need) someone who can go along and get some other men talking about health issues.”

But Ms Gillard said the mental health policy had not been “put together because I see any role for Tim”.
Would any hairdresser in this country not married to Gillard be considered for such a job?
===
Talking themselves into a dislike of Gillard
Andrew Bolt
The more they talk about the new Prime Minister on talkback, the more fault they find:
Gillard’s popularity among listeners, her “favourability” as measured by Media Monitors, has been falling since early this month and the chart here indicates it could be something of a leading indicator to the reversal in the polls witnessed in Newspoll this week.

”After a brief two-week honeymoon on talkback radio, the overall favourability of calls has been steadily dropping for the Prime Minister, from a neutral 50/100 down to a moderately unfavourable 45/100 within three weeks,” says Media Monitors analyst Patrick Baume.
Gillard isn’t helping herself on talkback, either. Alan Jones and Gillard on 2GB yesterday:
JONES: Tell my listeners when the company tax rate will go, for business, to 28c in the dollar?

Gillard: Alan, just one second, I’m describing it to you --

Jones: No, I don’t need a description. I just want to know when it will go to 28c in the dollar?

Gillard: It will go to 29c in the dollar in 2012 and then what we’ve said --

Jones: No it won’t. I’ll answer the question for you so that we can get on to something else. Your budget papers say, quote, “taxing mining super profits fairly through the resource super profits tax means we can afford to cut the company tax rate in two stages to 29 per cent in 2013-14 and 28 per cent in 2014-15.” That’s what it says.
===
Go play with your child instead
Andrew Bolt
Most forms of harm minimisation seem to condone what they should condemn. Take this latest:
CHILDREN will be able watch their parents gamble after the regulator gave approval for a pokies venue to build a special play area with a view of the action… The Victorian Commission for Gambling Regulation has given the Pink Hill Hotel permission for the children’s playroom to “be fully enclosed with soundproof glass so that children are visible to parents from the gaming room or bistro”.

VCGR executive commissioner Peter Cohen said it was better to have children inside the venue than being left outside in a car.
I had no idea they were the only two options.

The soundproof glass is a nice touch. Wouldn’t want the gamblers distracted by cries for Mummy.
===
Better late…
Andrew Bolt
Nine years after the September 11 attacks, Frances declares war on al Qaeda:
FRANCE has declared war on al-Qaeda, and matched its fighting words with a first attack on a base camp of the terror network’s North African branch, after the terror network killed a French humanitarian worker it took hostage in April.

The declaration and attack marked a shift in strategy for France, usually discrete about its behind-the-scenes battle against terrorism.

“We are at war with al-Qaeda,” Prime Minister Francois Fillon said today, a day after President Nicolas Sarkozy announced the death of 78-year-old hostage Michel Germaneau…

On Friday, the French backed Mauritanian forces in attacking an al-Qaeda camp on the border with Mali, killing at least six suspected terrorists. Experts confirmed it was the first attack outside Algeria on an al-Qaeda base, and the first known time France has taken part.

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