First on the list. Longevity in the lobbying business is clearly no impediment to speed. Stephen Carney set up his shingle on 1st February 1979 and has darted around the corridors of power for four years of Malcolm Fraser, 13 years of Bob Hawke and Paul Keating, 12 with John Howard and the first six months of Kevin Rudd. And now he is the first (and so far the only) member of his trade to register under the rules of the Lobbyist Register and Code of Conduct announced on Tuesday by Special Minister of State Senator John Faulkner. The more tardy lobbyists have until 1st July to follow his example and declare who they are operating for.
The final details of the lobbyist registration procedures have been changed in a way that should see at least some of those working for legal and accounting firms having to register and the system will be all the better for that.
Judging the budget. This year we will not need an opinion pollster to tell us what people think of the Budget and the performance so far of a new government. The Gippsland by-election on 28 June will give us a real, live measure and Labor must be approaching it with some confidence. Back in November Peter McGauran won it for the Nationals with 55.91% of the two party preferred vote. Now that he has retired a swing to Labor of just under six percent looks quite achievable if the budget has done nothing to end the Kevin Rudd honeymoon as would appear to be the public reaction.
Problems with the net. Liberal politicians seem to be having more than their fair share of troubles with the internet. In Victoria Opposition Leader Ted Baillieu has been dealing with dissident Liberal Party staffers posting critical comments about him on a blog. Now the West Australian Opposition Leader Troy Buswell finds himself fending off an allegation which appeared on a blog back in January that he played football with a cuddly quokka. This internet scuttlebutt is getting as ridiculous as the weekly women’s magazines!
The Daily Reality Check
Day two and the budget had a few more readers although what interests them is not what the Labor politicians might want. The Sydney Daily Telegraph has discovered stay-at-home mums resent working mum’s getting all the give-away goodies. Envy is a wonderful thing!
The Pick of this Morning’s Political Coverage
- Senate threat to alcopop tax haul – Michelle Grattan, Melbourne Age
- Mr Somersault’s agile, but that thin ice could crack – Annabel Crabb, Sydney Morning Herald
- Chair sniffer Troy buswell denies quokka abuse – Warwick Stanley, Sydney Daily Telegraph
- Mums at War: Rudd’s first Budget splits stay-at-home and working mums – Sue Dunlevy, Sydney Daily Telegraph
- No room in masterplan for mention of broken promises – Dennis Atkins, Brisbane Courier Mail
- Swan shows cool as Libs in disarray – Gerard McManus, Melbourne Herald Sun
- MP Bullies ‘reduced Lynda to tears’: Lynda Voltz threatened in opposing power sale – Joe Hildebrand, Sydney Daily Telegraph
- Baillieu leadership under fire – Paul Austin, Melbourne Age
What the world is reading on the net
Out of sigh, out of mind. People dying from an earthquake in China still have the attention of the world. People starving from the aftermath of a cyclone in Burma are quickly being forgotten. The suffering in both cases is similar but in China the world is seeing the sad pictures of suffering on their home television sets. In Burma there are few pictures and the power of words is not sufficient to influence editors let alone readers. Naturally enough the Chinese earthquake leads the site of the People’s Daily and the sympathy from Singapore’s predominantly Chinese population makes it no surprise that the story is the most read at The Straits Times. The international reputation of the London Times shows through too with a story about Chinese bloggers advancing conspiracy theories being most read. All of the nine international internet news sites in the Crikey survey report the earthquake prominently but only USA Today gives any real prominence to the tragedy still unfolding in Burma.
- United States – LA Times: Richard Riordan grows his restaurant empire
- United States – USA Today: W.Va. blowout bolsters Clinton’s resolve
- UK – The Independent: Body works: Photographs from the weird world of bodybuilding
- UK – The Times: China bloggers cook up quake conspiracies
- Singapore – The Straits Times: China quake damage tied to corruption, says expert
- China – The People’s Daily: Chinese, U.S. presidents talk over phone on quake, ties, Tibet
- Canada – Toronto Globe and Mail: Homes market flooded by sellers
- India – Times of India: 80 killed, 150 wounded in Jaipur blasts
- Australia – The Australian: We won’t raid $44bn fund pool, says PM Kevin Rudd
Quotes of the Day:
“A journalist’s twin points of references should be the real and the important. But for months the focus of the election coverage was on trivia. Every insignificant detail got blown out of proportion, with every chipmunk becoming a Godzilla. According to a report by the Project for Excellence in Journalism, over 60 percent of election coverage by the US media has been focused on campaign strategies, tactics or personalities — but not on actual political content. Reporters focused the most attention on such pressing questions as whether Barack Obama was wearing an American flag lapel pin, whether John McCain had a mistress eight years ago or whether former first lady Hillary Clinton was incorrectly recalling her 1996 trip to Bosnia.” — Gabor Steingart writing in De Spiegel
And…
“Get a real job, you f…… c…” — NSW Education Minister John Della Bosca sets children a good example while chatting with a photographer when riding his bike to work after losing his driving licence for speeding. See pictures of the bike riding minister here. It’s not a pretty sight.
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