THE PICK OF THE MORNING’S STORIES
Permanent diet may equal longer life – Los Angeles Times
Stern Hu ‘thrown to the wolves’ – Sydney Morning Herald
Climate comment rains on Rudd’s victory parade – Sydney Morning Herald
POLITICS AND ECONOMICS
Australia
Rio Tinto and China
Chinese spy row escalates as diplomatic crisis brews – The Australian
China crucible – Rowan Callick in The Australian on events that suggest the world’s last great one-party state already may be testing the limits of its formula for success.
Beijing’s intimidation – Greg Sheridan in The Australian sees Chinese government sending a message of crude intimidation and deep displeasure against Australia with the arrest of Rio Tinto executive Stern Hu, an Australian citizen, in Shanghai.
China intent on protecting Rio agreement at all cost – Ther Chinese Government has accused the detained Australian Rio Tinto executive, Stern Hu, of bribing steel companies on such a scale that he caused huge losses to China’s economic interests – Sydney Morning Herald
Stern Hu ‘thrown to the wolves’ – as his former boss at Rio Tinto calls on Australian Government to act – Sydney Morning Herald
Bribe claim baseless: Rio – Melbourne Age
Face-saving exercise puts a man in jeopardy – The Chinese Government has probably arrested Stern Hu in retaliation for the breakdown of its iron ore negotiations with Rio Tinto, a Shanghai expert in the concept of face in Chinese business dealings says – Melbourne Age
Seeing red over Rio – Malcolm Maiden in the Melbourne Age says Rio’s competitors can expect a boost in China, but the complex nature of Chinese culture is still to play out.
China claims Rio bribery with Stern Hu – Sydney Daily Telegraph
China offended by failure of Chinalco deal with Rio – West Australian Premier Colin Barnett says the failure of the Chinalco deal with Rio Tinto has clearly offended China and the federal government should have done more to establish a mature relationship with Beijing – The Australian
Diplomats to visit executive as Rio’s China crisis deepens – Brisbane Courier Mail
Diplomacy kicks in over arrest – Melbourne Herald Sun
Elections
Laying foundations for a Kevin Rudd re-election – George Megalogenis argues that the political success of the Rudd government’s $50 billion economic stimulus measures has given Labor an unexpected chance of saving all its marginal seats at the next election and to strip as many as 14 blue-collar seats from the Coalition – The Australian
Rudd on Rudd
A work in progress – Midway through his first term, the Prime Minister reflects on the economic hardship that allowed him to recast himself. He spoke with Peter Hartcher of the Sydney Morning Herald
Political life
Politicians caught with pie on faces – prominent politicians, Anthony Albanese and Frank Sartor, have been left red-faced after attending the re-opening of Rockdale’s brahim Lebanese Pastry last Saturday in their positions as the state and federal members. What they did not know was that one of the Ibrahim brothers, who have owned the shop for almost three decades, has a son who was recently charged with the murder of a Kings Cross identity, Todd O’Connor – Sydney Morning Herald
Uluru
PM rejects ban on climbing sacred site – Sydney Morning Herald
Economic matters
Alarming debt bomb is ticking – Funding for Australia’s huge deficit is being threatened by a nearly saturated bond market writes Neil Muston in the Melbourne Age
‘Evil Revolution’ eats up school funds – The Australian discovers up front costs
Government spends $1.7m on house for light rail project – Yhe Bligh Government has spent $1.7 million buying an old house with a land value of just $285,000 for the Gold Coast light rail project – Brisbane Courier Mail
Work the only stimulus utemen need to keep recession from the door – The Australian
Industrial relations
Stumble in talks scuppers deal on NSW police pay – Sydney Morning Herald
Performance pay scheme to boost NSW disadvantaged schools – The best best teachers in NSW will be paid almost $100,000 a year to help struggling children in disadvantaged schools under a landmark performance pay deal – Sydney Daily Telegraph
Justice
Inquiry call for state’s judiciary – Victoria’s Chief Magistrate has called for a commission to examine complaints about judges and magistrates. This follows concerns about why a magistrate’s speeding ticket irregularities went unquestioned for a year – Melbourne Age
Nine fines lay bare a flawed system – Nick McKenzie and Fergus Shiel in the Melbourne Age examine the case of magistrate Carmen Randazzo resigned after a report found she had been caught speeding nine times in her departmental car in early 2008 and had nominated as driver her father – Italian senator and Melbourne identity Antonino Randazzo, who was not entitled to use the taxpayer-funded vehicle – on two of these occasions, even though he was overseas at the time.
Telecommunications
Telco gave warning on 000 faults – The Australian on warnings fgiven to be government by Telstra about the need to overhaul the antiquated 000 system
Boat people
‘Lost’ boatpeople off Indonesian coast thought safe – The Australian
Education
Libs in row over school rank tables – NSW Opposition Leader Barry O’Farrell has hit back at Brendan Nelson, urging the former federal education minister to “focus on the facts” of the school league tables debate before weighing in – The Australian
Opinions
Some look for a first job, others for any job – Ross Gittins in the Sydney Morning Herald writes how the deterioration in the labour market is occurring at a relatively moderate rate.
Forget the windbags and follow windfall theory of leadership – Peter Hartcher in the Sydney Morning Herald says we don’t really know what Rudd and Turnbull stand for, only what they say they stand for.
Silver tongue, but not a Latin lover – Annabel Crabb in the Sydney Morning Herald notes that the hat the Prime Minister is quickly becoming fluent in Twitterese, the clipped young dialect of the Intertubes.
Proceed with calm – Shaun Carney in the Melbourne Age goes on a vain search for the kind of man Kevin Rudd really is
Saint Kev and a miracle economy – Laurie Oakes in the Sydney Daily Telegraph reckons the PM k nows Latin too.
Uteman revived as part of package – Dennis Shanahan in The Australian on how the Rudd Labor government is appealing to utemen, contractors it calls, with self-conscious blokeiness, “tradies”.
Rudd’s golden chance – Paul Kelly in The Australian sees Kevin Rudd’s political strategy working like a dream.
World spotlight on Rudd at forum – Lenore Taylor finds Kevin Rudd’s Global Carbon Capture and Storage Institute emerging as the “positive announcement” from the meeting of world leaders – The Australian
Elsewhere
Afghanistan
Gordon Brown defends UK mission in Afghanistan as deaths mount – London Times
Economic matters
G8’s $25bn plan to aid poor farmers – The Australian
Opinions
A Lesson on Warming – New York Times editorial says at the Group of 8 summit, President Obama learned how divided the world remains on global warming and how hard he will have to work to pull off an agreement.
BUSINESS
General Motors emerges from bankruptcy – Chief Executive Fritz Henderson says the new, smaller GM will focus on customers, cars and changing the company’s culture. ‘Business as usual is over,’ he says. It will even sell vehicles on EBay – Los Angeles Times
NAB ‘needs to cover losses of $4bn’ – Sydney Daily Telegraph
Choice declares war on Woolworths and Coles – Sydney Daily Telegraph
ENVIRONMENT
Rudd gives Copenhagen talks little hope – Kevin Rudd has been overheard pouring cold water on world leaders’ chances of hammering out critical climate change limits in Copenhagen – just hours after US President Barack Obama called for global optimism – Melbourne Age
Climate comment rains on Rudd’s victory parade – US President, Barack Obama, has urged world leaders to banish their pessimism about thrashing out a climate-change deal with developing countries, heralding a new era for the US and citing Australia’s carbon capture project for plaudits. However, just hours later Mr Rudd was overheard pouring cold water on the prospects for a deal at the Copenhagen talks in December – Sydney Morning Herald
Desal plant to run ‘until dams reach 65%’ – Melbourne Age
Kevin Rudd pessimistic on emissions deal – The Australian
MEDIA
MPs to question tabloid bosses – News International faces three fresh inquiries into the conduct of its journalists and executives following the disclosures that Rupert Murdoch’s newspaper empire paid £1 million ($A2 million) to keep secret the use of criminal methods to get stories – Melbourne Age
Stokes and Packer set for war of attrition – The billionaires are now locked in a likely war of attrition over control of Consolidated Media’s prized investments in the pay TV companies Foxtel and Fox Sports and the jobs site Seek – Sydney Morning Herald
LIFE
Child care
DOCS toughens child-care stance with prosecutions – Sydney Morning Herald
Longevity
Permanent diet may equal longer life – Los Angeles Times
Motor racing
We will not pay for half a F1 GP: Brumby – Melbourne Age
Get GP formula right, says Premier John Brumby – Melbourne Herald Sun
The punt
Problem punters ‘lured back’ by casinos – Brisbane Courier Mail
Charity
Tough times put Ponting Foundation on back foot – The Australian cricket captain’s Ponting Foundation is one of many charities feeling the chill winds of an economic downturn that has cut into donations and slashed attendance at fundraising events – Melbourne Herald Sun
Law and order
Andrew Robinson was a parolled drug-fuelled time bomb – Adelaide Advertiser
Women’s soccer team call in security guards – Adelaide Advertiser
Town Planning
Finally, an end to Le Cornu site feud – Con Makris will start building at the controversial former Le Cornu site on O’Connell St next year, ending a bitter and drawn-out feud with the Adelaide City Council – Adelaide Advertiser
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