Posts Tagged Kevin Rudd

Scary Wary Kevin Wudd

The Herald Sun really do have editorialising on the front page down to a fine art, don’t they?

TAXPAYERS will foot an extra $2 billion foreign aid bill because the Government feared the consequences of upsetting Foreign Affairs Minister Kevin Rudd.

Ballooning aid spending in Africa and the Caribbean, where Mr Rudd is chasing votes for a seat on the 15-member UN Security Council, is also causing alarm within the Government

“Ballooning”!? I will have to “foot” an “extra” $2 billion! All because they’re scared of Kevin Rudd?!

Even the figure of of $2 billion is misleading. Because according to their own story from yesterday aid spending is increasing by $500 million next year, and is expected to grow by $1.9 billion in the next four years. Which is 0.35% of Australian GNI, leaving Australia well short of their commitment to lift foreign aid to 0.5% of GNI by 2015.

Increased foreign aid spending, which has bipartisan support, could have been deferred, but the Government opted against asking for cuts similar to the $2.7 billion from the Department of Defence.

Ooo… we’re cutting money on defence but giving money to foreigners… I see what you’re doing there.

Labor MPs feared asking Mr Rudd to trim his expanding budget would cause an internal fight despite having to find other savings which had hurt families.

My heart bleeds for the families on a combined income upwards of $150k. How dare those poor people living in absolute poverty with no access to education and clean water take money away from the Allardyces?

The bottom line of this story is that Kevin Rudd wants to keep this commitment to increase Australia’s foreign aid budget to 0.5% of GNI by 2015. He is apparently using his remaining political clout to lobby the government he is a part of to implement a policy he feels strongly about. So really, it’s an absolute non-story.

Besides, support for increases in foreign aid are bipartisan. Let’s hope it stays that way tonight.

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BREAKING NEWS

Stop the presses! This just in: Kevin Rudd not always popular.

FOREIGN Minister Kevin Rudd is an abrasive, impulsive ”control freak” who presided over a series of foreign policy blunders during his time as prime minister, according to secret United States diplomatic cables.

The scathing assessment – detailed in messages sent by the US embassy in Canberra to Secretaries of State Condoleezza Rice and Hillary Clinton over several years – are among hundreds of US State Department cables relating to Australia obtained by WikiLeaks and made available exclusively to The Age.

I was going to have to write something about the diplomatic cables leaked by Wikileaks eventually, and this gossip is enough to finally motivate me to write it.

Wikileaks is great.

Openness and accountability are the most important part of any democracy. When the doors of power remain firmly locked to public scrutiny corruption can not be too far behind. The existence of an organisation like Wikileaks, that has the means and willingness to release classified information to a large audience will serve to hold our leaders to account on the decisions they make.

As long as what is leaked is in the public interest.

War crimes are public interest, gossip between diplomats is not.

Wikileaks should hold themselves to the same standards that journalists (should) hold themselves to. Just because you know something that might interest the public, does not mean it is in the public interest. For our leaders, the threat of wikileaks should pressure them to perform their jobs better knowing that if they attempt to conduct their jobs in secret, they will be exposed for their indiscretions, corruption and deception.

Wikileaks already carries a big stick, perhaps it’s time they learnt to speak softly.

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Paul Howes shows his true colours

Paul Howes, the current boy-wonder of the union movement has certainly made a name for himself in this past year. After publicly and privately undermining an elected Prime Minister he is seen as one of the factional power-brokers in the ALP right and is one of the more powerful members of the ALP despite never having been elected by the Australian public.

On the eve of Kevin Rudd’s assassination as Prime Minister Paul Howes featured in an interview on Lateline stating that getting rid of Rudd was essential for Labor to win re-election, it was quite an extraordinary statement considering he was once Australia’s most popular PM in history. Surely personal grudges and payback had to be a factor?

Well a few months on, Rudd is finished as PM but is now our foreign minister. But that doesn’t stop Paul Howes continuing to snipe at him at every opportunity. Here was one of his tweets today.

So whilst we await patiently for any news on the 29 miners that are trapped underground and face the very likely prospect that there will be casualties, the leader of the largest union in the country uses the tragedy to continue his petty public vendetta against Kevin Rudd. And what on earth is the basis of his criticism? Kevin Rudd is the foreign minister, 2 of the men trapped underground are Australians and Australia has already offered assistance to the New Zealand authorities. Its completely within his portfolio to be commenting on it.

But that’s not what this is about, its not what Rudd said but who said it. Rudd publicly limited the role of the factions and therefore the unions whilst he was leader. And although he may be gone that legacy remains (to a reduced extent) through Gillard. And people like Paul Howes don’t let a grudge go.

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Election 2010: driving me to apathy

I want so desperately not to care. I wish I could look at politics and feel “this doesn’t affect me” like so many other normal people.

I care who wins the election. I care about health policy. I care about education policy. I care about environmental policy and transport policy. I care that millions of Australians – mostly Indigenous – live in poverty. I care that there are children who can’t read. I care that commited couples who want to get married can’t.

But what angers me the most is that each passing day of this election campaign I seem to care less and less.

With each day that goes by I feel more anger, that passes into dispair that passes into apathy. My disillusionment with politics is almost complete, my apathy almost final. Election campaign 2010 was the culprit; the final nail in the coffin of my passion for politics.

I guess it was naive of me, and I should have listened to the people who were much older than me when they tried to warn me. But I genuinely believed that government could be a force for the betterment of society. I believed that passionate people could show leadership and inspire a country to make itself better. Use the tools of government to make life for all people in Australia fairer and more equitable. My optimism shown to be completely foolish by the 2010 election campaign.

It was pretty tragic to see a sitting Prime Minister outed by his own party before the end of his first term. Rudd had lost his ability to sell, and there was no doubt that was causing problems. But I suspect Rudd was being frustrated from within: bad advice and wavering internal support for his policy positions would have made his job very difficult. The whole affair was made all the more tragic when he went public earlier this week to defend his achievements. Kevin Rudd made the most concise and convincing attack on Tony Abbott that has been made for the entire campaign. His appearance on Late Night Live filled me with something akin to joy. Finally someone from the ALP was articulating what needed to be said.

But it was short lived. The media turned his appearance into a soap opera. A will they/won’t they saga between Gillard and Rudd designed to play out in prime time news bulletins.

And all once again seemed hopelessly lost.

The media. To the pack of journalists (sic) who get paid to follow the candidates around, it’s not about you. It was never about you. The tax payers fund your junket. Politicians might occasionally not answer your questions. Sometimes they might run a little late, change their plans at the last minute and sometimes you might not get a policy document in advance. This may inconvenience you a little bit, you may have to work a little bit harder before filing. You may even get tired from standing up all day. Deal with it. Politicians aren’t there to make your job easy. They are trying to get reelected and sometimes journalistic scrutiny isn’t what they want.

So when you do get to ask them questions, you should scrutinize their policy. The tax-payer doesn’t fund your Australia wide travel so you can ask questions about why Tim isn’t campaigning with Julia, your there to ask questions of their policy, after all one of these people will be the leader of the country.

When Tony Abbott says. “Stop the taxes” you ask “What taxes? How will you recover the money?” when he says “Stop the waste,” you ask “To what waste are your referring, Tony? How much money is being ‘wasted’ and how do you propose we stop it?” and when he says “Stop the boats” you ask him “How do we stop the boats and why should we stop them?”

When they announce a policy you don’t ask them why their boyfriend isn’t there, you ask them about the policy.

Don’t complain about how this campaign has been dominated by distractions then report only on the distractions. You shouldn’t be making it harder for politicians to talk about issues. You should make it harder for them to be distracted from the issues.

Mark Latham is not an issue. Tim Mathieson is not an issue. Cabinet discussions are not an issue. The calluses on your feet are not an issue. Your boredom with the campaign is not an issue. Julia Gillard’s earlobes are not an issue and nor is what the Internet thinks of them.

Journalists of the press pack, editors, news directors and media moguls: political discourse in this country is broken and it’s all your fault.

So yes, Gillard is pretty uninspiring. Yes, Tony Abbott just scares me. The ALP and the Liberal Party look more and more alike. But that’s not it.

I think I lost faith in politics because of the media. Because ultimately, if anyone was in a position to raise political discoure in this country, it is the media. The media asks the questions. The media reports the news. All political discourse is mediated, the media can raise the level of this discourse.

I want to make this country better. I want those who are disadvantaged to be helped. I want those who do not have rights given rights. I want preserve the planet on which I live. But it’s all starting to feel a little hopeless. The whole system just isn’t working.

I’m not really angry, I’m not even surprised anymore. I’m just disappointed. I thought it could be different.

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Rudd gaffe: puts electorate before journalists

Kevin Rudd should be in damage control for putting children before journalists - say journalists.

Kevin Rudd should be in damage control for putting children before journalists, say journalists.

Kevin Rudd’s first appearance of the election campaign bordered on ludicrous today as he snubbed the most important people in this election campaign, the travelling media pack.

Mr Rudd refused to answer questions of the journalists, who were most considerate when repeatedly yelling out the same question about his relationship with Prime Minister Julia Gillard, as he tried to talk to a group of school children.

The man who was ousted as prime minister three and a half weeks ago spruiked something trivial about  the benefits of school spending to Year 3 and Year 4 students, totally oblivious to the needs of the journalists, some of whom invested in new clothes and opened Twitter accounts specially for this election campaign

Mr Rudd wanted media coverage – be there at 12:15pm, the hard-working, all-important reporters were told.

They obliged, some even had to catch taxis, and 45 minutes later the local member arrived at the school’s back entrance, then took the chatty principal with him to the front entrance where the waiting media cameras rolled.

The anxious media scrum, some with sore feet, encircled Mr Rudd as he spoke to principal Greg Kretschmann about facilities built with stimulus program funding.

But today, in Mr Rudd’s safe Labor seat of Griffith in Brisbane’s south, it seemed Cooparoo State School was the place where you are not supposed to ask questions, even in the unlikely event they were sensible ones.

“This is just great,” said one journalist sarcastically. “We’re not here to show him looking at schools and communicating with children from his electorate. He should be talking to us about what’s most important in this election campaign; his relationship with Julia Gillard. Doesn’t he know who we are?

“First they make us fly in a loud air force Hercules and now this.”

Mr Rudd finally spoke to journalists as he walked to his tax-payer funded Commonwealth car.

“I’ll just say one thing before I go… and that is throughout this election campaign I’ll be speaking only about local issues here in my community here in Griffith, such as this school building program, and the need to complete that program in each and every one of the 42 primary schools in my electorate,” he said, pretending to be oblivious as to what election campaigns are really about.

Apologies to the ABC’s Annie Guest

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Wilson’s Lament

(With apologies to John Cooper Clarke)

Bloody wogs on bloody boats,
The bloody border’s a bloody joke,
Bloody Rudd was a bloody clown,
The bloody cunts should bloody drown,
Bloody Turnbull was bloody fucked,
No one had the bloody guts,
To bloody do what needs be done,
And bloody shoot the bloody scum.

I’m bloody sick of spicks and wops,
And bloody chinks who eat their dogs,
The bloody coons and bloody gins,
Should have their bloody heads bashed in,
I’m bloody Wilson bloody Tuckey,
The bloody Party’s bloody lucky,
To have a true blue Aussie ’round,
Who’ll grind these bloody bastards down.

The bloody feminists are bloody Nazis,
The bloody greenies are bloody arses,
The bloody weather’s not bloody changing,
It’s bloody hot or it’s bloody raining,
To bloody build a bloody town,
Bloody raze the bloody ground!
This bloody country’s bloody lucky,
To bloody have Ol’ Ironbar Tuckey.

Our bloody miners are bloody legends,
Bloody Gillard should pull her head in,
Her bloody tax is a bloody shocker,
She’s bloody off her bloody rocker,
She’s bloody got no bloody children!
What bloody world do we bloody live in?
The bloody country’s bloody stuffed,
And I’ve bloody had e-bloody-nuff!

These bloody terrorists on bloody boats,
They’re bloody proof shit bloody floats,
I’d bloody bring the bloody Navy,
To blow their bodies to bloody gravy,
It’s bloody them or bloody us,
Never bloody mind the fuss!
The bloody bastards can bloody starve!
Now where’d I put that old iron bar?

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Look who’s crying

So much sorrow from the Opposition benches about the “knifing” of Kevin Rudd. Joe Hockey seems to have taken it particularly bad, with his sombre questions in yesterday’s question time to Prime Minister Gillard, and her deputy Wayne Swan about their role in the brutality.

He even tweeted his sadness:

JoeHockey Quiet because I am still stunned at brutal KR fall. JG &WS have alot to fess up to all Aussies.

Joe and his Coalition colleagues, including Tony Abbott and Barnaby Joyce who have also expressed their sadness and dismay at Rudd’s treatment at the hands of his own Party, would be sad to read the following edited extract from Wikipedia:

He proved to be a surprisingly poor media performer and public speaker, and was portrayed by the media as a foolish and incompetent administrator. He was unlucky to come up against a new and formidable Opposition Leader.

He generated great resentment within his party, and his opponents became increasingly critical of his reliance on an inner circle of advisers.

With his Party falling further behind in the polls, a challenge was launched … he called a Party meeting to settle the matter and took it upon himself to say “Well, that is not a vote of confidence, so the party will have to elect a new leader”.

Just don’t tell them it’s actually about former Liberal Prime Minister John Gorton, who was dumped by his own Party in 1971, mid way through his first elected term as Prime Minister.

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Warning not heeded

In the wake of Kevin Rudd’s shock dethroning by former deputy Julia Gillard, analysts and commentators have been quick to blame Rudd’s communication style, ALP factions, Rudd’s consultative style, unions, Rudd’s language choices, the media, Rudd’s tie choices, the mining tax, and Rudd’s mannerisms.

But all those analysts and commentators are wrong. Plain wrong.

Instead, it’s only the brave economic and social warriors at the Citizens Electoral Council who have successfully cut through the spin and bullshit and have highlighted the real reason behind Rudd’s downfall in their latest press release (not online): a planet-wide mass-strike.

Rudd falls in global mass-strike; who’s next?

One year after Kevin Rudd’s infamous outburst, “I regard Mr LaRouche as right off the planet”, he’s fallen victim to the planet-wide mass-strike that only LaRouche saw coming.

On 30th June, 2009, Rudd had reacted to CEC Queensland Secretary Jan Pukallus asking him why he didn’t heed LaRouche’s advice on the global economic crisis that his government falsely claimed nobody saw coming.

[...]

That outrage was identified by Lyndon LaRouche in his 1st August international webcast, as a global mass-strike. It has sparked an extraordinary wave of mass protest inside the U.S. against Barack Obama’s bailout of Wall Street and his gutting of healthcare, a wave that has claimed many sitting U.S. politicians and threatens to oust Obama himself.

On the unfolding dynamic of the mass-strike, Lyndon LaRouche commented yesterday, “most people do believe in the idea that history is shaped by events. And on the contrary, history shapes events. That’s the way it works, and you see this in the process of the mass-strike … .”

Oh, well. Too late for Rudd. Hopefully Gillard will heed these dire warnings of … well, whatever it is those freaks are warning us of.

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Not for your eyes

Tonight, the leaders of Australia’s two main political parties will square off in a nationally broadcast debate that will discuss issues likely to dominate political debate in the lead up to this year’s federal election.Screen shot 2010-06-14 at 3.01.38 PM

Sounds like something you’d like to watch?

Tough titties.

Unfortunately, Mr Rudd and Mr Abbott will be specifically addressing the Christian voter and only churches and Christian organisations will be able to register for the webcast.

Because you see, the debate has been organised by the ever vigilant guardians of decency and morality at the Australian Christian Lobby, and they don’t want any of you fucking baby-killing, drug addicted poofs to see it. Get your own private leaders debate.

The event is being held in Canberra and being broadcast via a Webcast to church groups and Christian organisations only. And fair enough, I think Christians should get their own private leaders debate. I’m sure the same courtesy will be extended to Muslim, Jewish, Hindu and Buddhist Australians when the time comes…

It’s not like they will be talking about things that are going to affect all Australians or anything. I’m sure they will only be talking about personal religious issues, right?

Parliament’s highest profile Christians will be quizzed on everything from asylum seekers to abortion, pornography and the sexualisation of children.

Their commitment to the national schools chaplaincy program will also be questioned, with funding for the initiative due to wind up at the end of next year.

Oh, God Damn It!

I’m sure they will talk about the other Christian issues mentioned on the ACL website too too, like gay marriage, video game classification, paid parental leave and internet filtering. All exclusively Christian issues; the rest of Australia has no place involving themselves in these issues which clearly only concern Christians.

However, if you godless heathens do feel like listening in on the debate, the ACL has been kind enough to list the churches that will be streaming the webcast here. Maybe you can even repent your sins while you are there.

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Because that’s never a lie

The ALP is denying that there are any plans to replace Rudd as the leader heading into the next election, says Penny Wong:

“We are absolutely focused and united behind Kevin,”

“Mr Rudd will remain being Prime Minister and leader of the Party, and I hope we will win the next election and he’ll be Prime Minister next term.”

Just like Malcolm Turnbull.

And Brendan Nelson.

And Kim Beazley.

“Kim Beazley has had my consistent support since his return to the leadership in January 2005, there is no change in my position. My support continues for him as leader.

“Like all Labor members I am working hard for the election of a federal Labor government.”

- Kevin Rudd

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