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Hansard
- Start of Business
- TAX LAWS AMENDMENT (SIMPLIFIED SUPERANNUATION) BILL 2006
- SUPERANNUATION (EXCESS CONCESSIONAL CONTRIBUTIONS TAX) BILL 2006
- SUPERANNUATION (EXCESS NON-CONCESSIONAL CONTRIBUTIONS TAX) BILL 2006
- SUPERANNUATION (EXCESS UNTAXED ROLL-OVER AMOUNTS TAX) BILL 2006
- SUPERANNUATION (DEPARTING AUSTRALIA SUPERANNUATION PAYMENTS TAX) BILL 2006
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- PRIVATE HEALTH INSURANCE BILL 2006
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- PRIVATE HEALTH INSURANCE (PROSTHESES APPLICATION AND LISTING FEES) BILL 2006
- PRIVATE HEALTH INSURANCE (COLLAPSED ORGANIZATION LEVY) AMENDMENT BILL 2006
- PRIVATE HEALTH INSURANCE COMPLAINTS LEVY AMENDMENT BILL 2006
- PRIVATE HEALTH INSURANCE (COUNCIL ADMINISTRATION LEVY) AMENDMENT BILL 2006
- PRIVATE HEALTH INSURANCE (REINSURANCE TRUST FUND LEVY) AMENDMENT BILL 2006
- BUSINESS
- AUSCHECK BILL 2006
- CLASSIFICATION (PUBLICATIONS, FILMS AND COMPUTER GAMES) AMENDMENT BILL 2006
- CUSTOMS LEGISLATION AMENDMENT (AUGMENTING OFFSHORE POWERS AND OTHER MEASURES) BILL 2006
- NATIVE TITLE AMENDMENT BILL 2006
- EMPLOYMENT AND WORKPLACE RELATIONS LEGISLATION AMENDMENT (WELFARE TO WORK AND VOCATIONAL REHABILITATION SERVICES) BILL 2006
- MURRAY-DARLING BASIN AMENDMENT BILL 2006
- AUSTRALIAN TECHNICAL COLLEGES (FLEXIBILITY IN ACHIEVING AUSTRALIA’S SKILLS NEEDS) AMENDMENT BILL (NO. 2) 2006
- TAX LAWS AMENDMENT (2006 MEASURES NO. 7) BILL 2006
- TAX LAWS AMENDMENT (2006 MEASURES NO. 4) BILL 2006
- COMMITTEES
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AIRSPACE BILL 2006
AIRSPACE (CONSEQUENTIALS AND OTHER MEASURES) BILL 2006 - AIRSPACE (CONSEQUENTIALS AND OTHER MEASURES) BILL 2006
- CUSTOMS TARIFF AMENDMENT (INCORPORATION OF PROPOSALS) BILL 2006
- SAFETY, REHABILITATION AND COMPENSATION AND OTHER LEGISLATION AMENDMENT BILL 2006
- TAX LAWS AMENDMENT (2006 MEASURES NO. 6) BILL 2006
- WHEAT MARKETING AMENDMENT BILL 2006
- QUESTIONS WITHOUT NOTICE
- DISTINGUISHED VISITORS
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QUESTIONS WITHOUT NOTICE
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Reserve Bank of Australia
(Rudd, Kevin, MP, Howard, John, MP) -
The Drought
(Forrest, John, MP, Vaile, Mark, MP) -
Iraq
(Rudd, Kevin, MP, Howard, John, MP) -
Iraq
(Johnson, Michael, MP, Downer, Alexander, MP) -
Iraq
(Rudd, Kevin, MP, Howard, John, MP) -
Families
(Barresi, Phillip, MP, Costello, Peter, MP) -
Iraq
(Rudd, Kevin, MP, Howard, John, MP) -
Private Health Insurance
(Bartlett, Kerry, MP, Abbott, Tony, MP) -
Immigration
(Wilkie, Kim, MP, Howard, John, MP) -
Independent Contractors
(Henry, Stuart, MP, Andrews, Kevin, MP) -
Immigration
(Gillard, Julia, MP, Howard, John, MP) -
Fiji
(Secker, Patrick, MP, Downer, Alexander, MP) -
Workplace Relations
(Rudd, Kevin, MP, Howard, John, MP)
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Reserve Bank of Australia
- QUESTIONS TO THE SPEAKER
- PERSONAL EXPLANATIONS
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MR IAN DUNDAS
MRS MARLENE DUNDAS - QUESTIONS TO THE SPEAKER
- AUDITOR-GENERAL’S REPORTS
- DOCUMENTS
- DOCUMENTS
- BUSINESS
- COMMITTEES
- MATTERS OF PUBLIC IMPORTANCE
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FINANCIAL SECTOR LEGISLATION AMENDMENT (TRANS-TASMAN BANKING SUPERVISION) BILL 2006
PRIVACY LEGISLATION AMENDMENT (EMERGENCIES AND DISASTERS) BILL 2006
INDIGENOUS EDUCATION (TARGETED ASSISTANCE) AMENDMENT BILL 2006
EDUCATION SERVICES FOR OVERSEAS STUDENTS LEGISLATION AMENDMENT (2006 MEASURES NO. 1) BILL 2006
EDUCATION SERVICES FOR OVERSEAS STUDENTS LEGISLATION AMENDMENT (2006 MEASURES NO. 2) BILL 2006
AUSTRALIAN NUCLEAR SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY ORGANISATION AMENDMENT BILL 2006
CHILD SUPPORT LEGISLATION AMENDMENT (REFORM OF THE CHILD SUPPORT SCHEME—NEW FORMULA AND OTHER MEASURES) BILL 2006
INSPECTOR OF TRANSPORT SECURITY BILL 2006
INSPECTOR OF TRANSPORT SECURITY (CONSEQUENTIAL PROVISIONS) BILL 2006
JUDICIARY LEGISLATION AMENDMENT BILL 2006
ABORIGINAL AND TORRES STRAIT ISLANDER HERITAGE PROTECTION AMENDMENT BILL 2005 - COMMITTEES
- ROYAL COMMISSIONS AMENDMENT (RECORDS) BILL 2006
- COMMITTEES
- MAIN COMMITTEE
- SPECIAL ADJOURNMENT
- LEAVE OF ABSENCE
- COMMITTEES
- WHEAT MARKETING AMENDMENT BILL 2006
- ENERGY EFFICIENCY OPPORTUNITIES AMENDMENT BILL 2006
- ADJOURNMENT
- Adjournment
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Main Committee
- Start of Business
- STATEMENTS BY MEMBERS
- ENERGY EFFICIENCY OPPORTUNITIES AMENDMENT BILL 2006
- COMMITTEES
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ADJOURNMENT
- Television Sports Broadcasting
- Ms Tenneil Friend
- Child Sexual Assault
- Battle of Long Tan
- Climate Change
- Boothby Electorate
- Veterans’ Affairs: Mental Health
- Water Safety
- Workplace Relations
- Perth to Bunbury Highway
- Melbourne Ports Electorate
- Flinders Electorate: Seniors
- Workplace Relations
- McPherson Electorate: Needle and Syringe Program
- Pearl Harbor
- Moncrieff Electorate: High-Impact Tower
- Petrie Electorate: School Funding
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QUESTIONS IN WRITING
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KPMG Review
(Georganas, Steve, MP, McGauran, Peter, MP) -
KPMG Review
(Murphy, John, MP, McGauran, Peter, MP) -
Veterans’ Affairs: Office Space
(Thomson, Kelvin, MP, Billson, Bruce, MP) -
Information Technology Divisions
(Ellis, Kate, MP, McGauran, Peter, MP) -
Office of Small Business
(Bowen, Chris, MP, Bailey, Fran, MP) -
Government Information: Unathorised Leaking
(Thomson, Kelvin, MP, Ruddock, Philip, MP) -
Freedom of Information
(Thomson, Kelvin, MP, Downer, Alexander, MP)
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KPMG Review
Page: 214
Mr SNOWDON (12:35 PM)
—On 16 October the member for Leichhardt made a speech in which he attempted to justify his unwillingness to explain to his electorate why he supports the Howard government’s extreme industrial relations laws. This matter has been brought to my attention by some concerned friends and citizens of North Queensland. We know the real reason why he, like so many other Liberal and National Party friends, colleagues and members of this chamber, is happy to do the bidding of the Prime Minister in Canberra and hide from the consequences in their own electorate. Nothing typifies this behaviour more than the industrial relations laws. Despite the parliamentary bluff and bluster, the reality is that the Liberal and National parties know that the industrial relations laws are a disaster for them. The independent e-commentary website Currumbin2Cook reported during the Queensland election campaign, after its first focus group meeting in which voters were asked their views on various issues:
Some things stand out. There are two gorillas in the room that no-one is talking about. One is the federal IR laws...
This was posted by Graham Young, a former vice-president and campaign chairman of the Queensland Liberal Party. Another post said:
Right from the start it was clear that it was a vote-changer. Opposition to Work Choices was shifting votes to Labor and holding votes that Labor would otherwise have lost on state issues.
This is why the member for Leichhardt is hiding from the voters of his electorate—or maybe he is just too busy. I note that in September he accepted an appointment to the board of the listed Cairns based property group CEC. In the speech I referred to, the member for Leichhardt made a number of claims about the Leichhardt union campaign to debate the laws. He said:
I have been challenged to debate the new IR laws at times when it was known that I would not be in town.
In November 2005 he was asked to speak at a National Day of Action rally at his office in Cairns. His staff told organisers, and he himself has stated publicly, that he was not in. We know that he was in his office in a meeting with the member for Dawson. The member for Leichhardt’s staff also denied that he was in town during a rally in August of this year. He was up the road having lunch at Raintrees Tavern. He also said:
More recently, a so-called invitation demanding that I attend at a certain time and place turned up at my office without so much as a return contact number for RSVP purposes.
The fact is that the invitation was sent to the member for Leichhardt by email with the name and details of the sender. It was faxed and it was sent by registered post. He also says he asked Ergon Energy to investigate a number of complaints against the participation of Ergon workers in the Cairns Your Rights at Work campaign. The member for Leichhardt stated that Ergon could find no evidence to support his:
... claims of inappropriate use of Ergon assets for union activity despite being forwarded a resolution from an ETU meeting that was sent to me by union steward Stewart Trail during work hours from his Ergon email account.
The Ergon certified agreement contains a provision for the union delegate to allow him access to work on computers and email for union business. Has Work Choices got to the stage where an employee cannot use an employer’s computer even when it is part of an agreed certified agreement? The member for Leichhardt also stated:
My office also has provided ... photographic evidence of the activity of their employees which included the photograph of 42 Ergon Energy vehicles ... during an ETU protest rally outside my electorate office in August.
I am told that the entire Ergon fleet in McLeod Street, Cairns, is 42. On the day of the rally there were some Ergon vehicles in the member for Leichhardt’s street but nowhere near the 42, and they were parked away from the member for Leichhardt’s office. These are workers who start and finish on site and as a consequence were having their lunch and parked their vehicles to attend the rally. This again is permissible under the Ergon EBA.
The distortions, deceptions, half-truths and unsubstantiated allegations contained in the speech by the member for Leichhardt are typical of the approach of the Howard government to industrial relations. The fact is that the Howard government’s industrial relations laws are indefensible and that is why the member for Leichhardt remains in hiding from those who elected him. I say to the member for Leichhardt: the people who have contacted me about this are very concerned citizens. They are concerned about him. They are concerned about his need to make sure he communicates with them and stands up for his government’s industrial relations laws. He has failed to do so and yet he has come into this chamber and made excuses as to why he has not. They appear to be, on the surface at least, excuses which when put to the test do not stand up. There are two sides to the story and I am giving the alternate side—the one the member failed to give when he addressed this parliament.