NSW

Yet More Hansard One Liners

Liam's picture

Mrs KARYN PALUZZANO: My question is addressed to the Premier. Will the Premier update the House on ethics courses?

No, Mister Rees, I expect you to die

Liam's picture

In the story, Kemal Atatürk, prototypical pre-Turkish patriot and butcher, ordered the conscript troops defending Gallipoli from the invaders to die, in order that other troops might take their places.

Paul Howes, ex-Trotskyist turned Murdoch editorialist of the AWU, reads from the same songsheet.

The scorched-earth press conference of Thursday morning, when Mr Rees said any challenger would be a “puppet of Eddie Obeid and Joe Tripodi”, was condemned by AWU national secretary Paul Howes as “a great disservice to his party”.
“The good news of that press conference is it sealed his [Rees’s] fate,” he added.

We’re only beginning to see this meme; that assertiveness and honesty in defence of a Premiership is traitorous in the Left, while shadowy maneouvring is admirable and correct in the Right. It’s not a disservice to the Party, you see, while in the absence of any particular crisis or policy dispute, to do the numbers and knock off a Premier. It’s a disservice to the Party for that Premier not to be a member of the NSW Centre Unity faction.

Left of the NSW Labor Party! You are not asked to fight. You are asked to be dutifully and uncomplaningly stabbed for no particular reason in order that the Right may enjoy purposeless hegemony.

Dirty Deals Done Divinely

Liam's picture

Bang a gong, it’s on, in the Christian Democrats in NSW. In a journal entry worth reading in full, here is an eye-opening sentence from the Rev. Gordon Moyes:

Rev Fred Nile in his President’s Email., No 8 July 2008 wrote after quoting Romans 13:1-4): “I must respect the NSW ALP Government as “divinely constituted” and that to rebel against the Government “is resisting God’s appointment”.

Weekend NSW ALP Fatsos

Mark's picture

Clearly I was not the only one who found the idea of John della Bosca on a bicycle farcical:




And kudos to the SMH for finding this photograph to illustrate an otherwise rather banal story about David Campbell’s junket to the US. I do think that the taxpayers shouldn’t be paying for some unspecified fatso’s coffee on a weekend trip to MOMA, but the trip does seem to accord with the general norms of public service. If anything, it just adds to my already-entrenched opinion that the states are a waste of money and should be abolished.




What do you think Davo’s eating here? Looks like a blin to me (meaning the caviar is presumably already seeping down his gullet), although I’m sure he didn’t get where he is passing up the odd humble pikelet either.

The Arrogance of Incumbency

Mark's picture

I’m struck by how much the NSW state Labor government resemble not the new federal Labor government but the old Howard regime. The arrogance of incumbency, populist social conservatism and neoliberal fundamentalism all remind me of that old administration. The particular thing that puts me in mind of the Howard government though is their new use of public funds for a political advertising campaign, which itself is a beat-up. Howard was the master of this, and action has rightly been promised at a federal level to stop it happening in the future.

The advertising campaign I’m referring to is one hyping the state government’s new plans to put in a metro link to the North-West from Sydney CBD. The fact of the matter is that not one thing has yet been done to actually build this link, that the Labor state government has a long history of announcing public infrastructure projects and then shelving them, and that it in fact shelved a more comprehensive plan to build a new full-scale CityRail link in favour of this plan.

Announcing and advertising infrastructure is a lot easier than building it. Fortunately, I don’t believe (as a materialist) that it can have anything like the same effect.

Clearly, the Iemma government is reviled in NSW. People in this state are well aware of the slippage of their quality of life in recent years, and the crucial link of this slippage to the lack of government action on metropolitan transport. Which is to say that, outrageous though it is, I think this campaign will be about as electorally successful as Howard’s WorkChoices advertising spree.