THIS MORNING’S FRONT PAGES
POLITICS AND ECONOMICS
Australia
Terrorism
Suspects ‘new to mosque’ – Somali terror suspects Saney Edow Aweys, Yacqub Khayre and Abdirahman Ahmed began attending the controversial 8 Blacks prayer centre in North Melbourne this year, only a few months before they were charged with plotting a terrorist attack – The Australian
Jihadis would be ‘shot in minutes’ – The Australian reports that any terrorists intending to mount an attack on the Holsworthy Barracks could be shot within minutes and the base needs no extra fortification because its elite soldiers almost always carry loaded weapons for training purposes.
Leaders warn of community backlash against raids – The Australian
Farcical security breach at Lavarack barracks – Brisbane Courier Mail
Accused terrorist a faultless child, says devastated uncle – Sydney Daily Telegraph
Uncle blames Australian system as terror suspect Yacqub Khayre revealed – Melbourne Herald Sun
Uncle blames welfare system for loss of nephew – Melbourne Age
Utegate
Liberal-Godwin Grech mess exposed – The true extent to which the Opposition allowed a senior Treasury official to script its questions at a Senate inquiry into the Utegate affair has been embarrassingly laid bare – Brisbane Courier Mail
Malcolm Turnbull blames fake email mole Godwin Grech – Brisbane Courier Mail
Utegate saga: Malcolm Turnbull sacrifices Godwin Grech – Stefanie Balogh in ther Brisbane Courier Mail on how Malcolm Turnbull – with his win-at-all-costs personality – has thrown Godwin Grech under a ute in a desperate bid to save his own tattered political skin.
Turnbull ducks email affair onslaught – The Government has embarked on a campaign of character assassination against Malcolm Turnbull and will next week chase his chief inquisitor, Eric Abetz, by attempting to have the Senate inquire into the OzCar debacle – Sydney Morning Herald
Leadership
Desperate Liberals look to replace Turnbull with Robb – Liberal MPs are considering replacing Malcolm Turnbull with Andrew Robb before the next election in the wake of the Opposition Leader’s disastrous calls on Kevin Rudd to resign over allegations of impropriety over the OzCar affair – The Australian
Costello critical of Turnbull tack – Former Treasurer Peter Costello has fuelled Government criticism of Opposition Leader Malcolm Turnbull by suggesting the approach from senior Treasury official Godwin Grech should have been treated with more caution – Melbourne Age
Joyce has designs as Nats’ top dog – Nationals Senate leader Barnaby Joyce has declared he wants to lead his party and has called for renewal in the Nationals’ parliamentary ranks – The Australian
John-Paul Langbroek told to sack chief-of-staff – Queensland Opposition Leader John-Paul Langbroek has been granted a stay of execution by his colleagues after forcing the resignation of a senior staffer over the doctored email controversy – Brisbane Courier Mail
Lobbying
Bligh bans lobbyists from Government boards – Brisbane Courier Mail
ALP boss’s link to $1m success fee – Union heavyweight Bill Ludwig and Queensland ALP president Ron Monaghan oversaw a decision to invest $100 million with a company advised by Labor mate Jim Elder’s lobbying firm that resulted in a $1m “success fee” being paid to another Labor figure – The Australian
Former Rudd staffer lobbied for $1bn – A former staffer of Kevin Rudd admitted yesterday he successfully lobbied the federal government to secure $1 billion in backing for a Brisbane-based non-bank lender. But Neville Conway, who managed the Prime Minister’s electorate campaign in 2007 before resigning to become a lobbyist, said yesterday he had never asked for any favours and did little more than direct his clients, FirstMac, to “fill out application forms” – The Australian
Heavyweights pay to dine with PM – The Australian
Racing chiefs ‘paid’ Bolkus – Adelaide Advertiser
Businesses pay to meet Brumby – Melbourne Age
Aboriginal affairs
Stark call to end housing ‘gravy train‘ – Aboriginal leaders have warned the federal government that it must regain control over indigenous policy in the Northern Territory – The Australian
Elections
Games of show and tell – Territorians have been told it is up to them to decide who will lead the NT into the future. Renegade MLA Alison Anderson said yesterday she would listen to the people before meeting with Independent Gerry Wood to decide if they will support the CLP, Labor or force an election – Northern Territory News
Industrial relations
Business fat cats lashed over pay – The cycle of excessive reward for private sector executives has been lashed by the body that sets pay for judges and politicians, which says top public servants work just as hard for much less – Sydney Morning Herald
Opinions
Terror in our backyard – Rajat Ganguly, program chair in Security, Terrorism and Counterterrorism Studies at Murdoch University, writes in the Melbourne Age that a comprehensive strategy would help defuse the real threat to Australia’s security.
Copping it from both sides – Michelle Grattan writers in the Melbourne Age that Peter Costello is being mischievous and provocative. Kevin Rudd is the cold-blooded strategist. Their victim is Malcolm Turnbull, whose huge self-belief must surely be deflating, as the only thing he has to look forward to in the months ahead is a lot more pain and trouble.
Fitzgerald’s corrruption views merit attention – The Melbourne Age‘s Paul Austin says Premier John Brumby’s response to corruption warnings ignores real dangers.
Liberals ignored red flags in Godwin Grech affair – Dennis Atkins in the Brisbane Courier Mail on the warning signals the Liberals missed when dealing with Godwin Grech.
It’s a loser or the last man standing – Dennis Shanahan in The Australian writes that, as incredible as it seems, there are significant Liberal figures thinking about replacing Turnbull as Liberal leader and facing Labor at the next election — expected late next year — with their fourth leader in two years.
Integrity is lacking, despite an outbreak of moralising – Christian Kerr points out in The Australianthat while Kevin Rudd talks about integrity, it’s lacking in his back yard of Queensland.
Elsewhere
North Korea
Bill Clinton and Journalists in Emotional Return to U.S. – New York Times
Japanese election
Ruling Party’s Rural Base Erodes in Japan – New York Times
Opinions
Let the Big Dog Run – Maureen Dowd in the New York Times writes that conservatives were screeching, naturally, that the Clinton trip would provide propaganda cover to the North Koreans to continue their nuclear shell game. But the former Bush bullies have no credibility on diplomacy. They spent eight years wrecking it, and the score for them on North Korea is 0-6; zero meetings with Kim and enough plutonium for six nuclear bombs.
Burma’s deadly course – Greg Sheridan in The Australian says there is no doubt there is a deep relationship between the Burmese and North Korean militaries.
BUSINESS
ANZ slams watchdog over mergers – The chief executive of ANZ, Mike Smith, delivered a broadside to the competition regulator, saying the commission’s stance against further bank mergers would not stop it from trying to buy a smaller domestic rival – Melbourne Age
Storm Financial ‘pressured’ Commonwealth Bank staff – The Commonwealth Bank has admitted some of its staff misused the bank’s systems to write loans for Storm Financial customers that were larger than they should have been – Brisbane Courier Mail
ENVIRONMENT
Madden battle ramps up – Planning Minister Justin Madden faces a Supreme Court battle with a community group after approving a controversial boat ramp development that experts found was environmentally and economically flawed – Melbourne Age
MEDIA
Federal and Victorian police at odds over coverage: editor – The Australian
Seven and Nine race to stream shows – The Sydney Morning Herald
The media: love, fear, rage, jealousy … but light on reality – Jonathan Holmes on his Media Watch year – Sydney Morning Herald
LIFE
Child protection
State’s child-protection workers overburdened – Melbourne Age
Emotional well-being
Shed time at men’s club – The Melbourne Club makes a submission to the Victorian Parliament’s scrutiny of acts and regulations committee is reviewing exclusions and exemptions under the equal opportunity laws and compares its activities to the ‘‘men’s sheds” anti-depression initiative – Melbourne Age
The punt
Daniel Merrett leak by Brisbane Lions pays big dividends – The Brisbane Lions boss has conceded that some bets placed on Daniel Merrett to kick the first goal in their match last Saturday were most likely made with information from within the club of a positional switch – Brisbane Courier Mail
The drink
Pub police to stem violence – Police throughout Queensland will patrol inside pubs and nightclubs to clamp down on rising levels of alcohol-related violence and injury – Brisbane Courier Mail
Study shows drinkers are bad company – Adelaide Advertiser
The drugs
New technology will help police to detect drugged drivers – Melbourne Herald Sun
Religion
Mundine’s Muslim retreat plans KO’d by local pressure – Sydney Daily Telegraph
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