THE PICK OF THE MORNING’S STORIES

090701smhRevealed: student death toll set to riseSydney Morning Herald

Grants double-up fuels regional home boomThe Australian

POLITICS AND ECONOMICS

Australia

Foreign students

Revealed: student death toll set to rise – Details of the deaths of more than 50 overseas students have been suppressed by Australian coroners amid claims that the details are being kept quiet as part of an attempt to protect the lucrative $15.5 billion overseas student market – Sydney Morning Herald

India delegation to rescue lucrative student industry – Sydney Morning Herald

‘He was the only hope for this family’ – before the Indian student died in Australia – Sydney Morning Herald

Foreign student death details suppressed – Melbourne Age

Ute gate

Joe Hockey creates more turmoil for Malcolm Turnbull – Police appear to have cleared Malcolm Turnbull over the OzCar scandal but the opposition faces a new political headache, with Treasury spokesman Joe Hockey yesterday questioning the Howard government’s cherished economic legacy – The Australian

Kevin Rudd puts brake on ute brawl – Prime Minister Kevin Rudd has side-stepped questions about whether he is sorry he borrowed the rusty ute at the centre of the Utegate scandal and instead attacked The Courier-Mail – Brisbane Courier Mail

Utegate cops clear Turnbull – Sydney Daily Telegraph

Turnbull’s Ozcar statement satisfies police – Sydney Morning Herald

Health

Rudd leaves door ajar on federal hospitals grabSydney Morning Herald

Brumby vows to fight Rudd over hospitals – Melbourne Age

Boat people

Softer border controls blamed for suspected flood of refugeesSydney Morning Herald

Industrial relations

Hotel staff aim to be first in line for new fair work lawsSydney Morning Herald

090701australian

Union push for 6pc wage risesThe Australian

Union blamed as staff avoid retailers’ pay deal – The Australian

Union back in strife on sackings – The troubled Health Services Union has hit acrimony again, with police called yesterday amid claims the president of an influential branch of the union, Pauline Fegan, bullied and tried to evict a senior manager – Melbourne Age

Polls, elections and pre-selections

090701newspollConfidence in future bounces back – Dennis Shanahan in The Australian looks at a Newspoll finding that shows public confidence is beginning to return.

Economic matters

Government borrowing soars, as consumers tighten pursestringsThe Australian

Taxes cut, benefits boosted from todayMelbourne Herald Sun

200,000 laggards missed $900 bonus – Sydney Morning Herald

Grants double-up fuels regional home boom – The epicentre of the boom is regional Victoria, where the combination of federal and state government grants means first-time buyers outside Melbourne can pocket up to $36,500 to ease the path into home ownership. And it is happening amid a curiously buoyant national residential market, with new figures yesterday showing house prices increasing in the first five months of the year in all state capitals except Perth – The Australian

Melbourne in housing recoveryMelbourne Age

Brisbane house prices on the rise, median at $432,000 – Brisbane Courier Mail

Sydney house prices defy downturn – Sydney Morning Herald

Death penalty

Law to ensure death penalty stays dead – Federal Government has written to the states telling them of its plans to introduce laws banning them from ever reintroducing the death penalty, whether they like it or not. Although all states have abolished the death penalty, under existing laws there is nothing preventing a future government from bringing it back – Sydney Morning Herald

Leadership

Martin Hamilton-Smith refuses to quit SA Liberal leadershipAdelaide Advertiser

Aboriginal affairs

Silent shame of Cherbourg school where pupils can’t hear teacherBrisbane Courier Mail

Wasteful government

Building cost projections ‘flawed’, says Queensland auditor-generalBrisbane Courier Mail

Council of Australian government

Reformed COAG a one-stop co-op – writes Prime Minister Kevin Rudd in The Australian

Job for a boy

Bomber Kim Beazley hits job bullseye – Appointed to bioard of the Australian War Memorial – The Australian

Corruption

Premier cuts old colleague loose – Andrew Fraser in The Australian writes of a sitting premier appearing in a criminal trial where her former cabinet colleague had been charged with corruption

Political life

Labor’s underbelly – Rick Wallace writes in The Australian that ALP warlord George Seitz’s proposed memoir is sure to be an embarrassing book for the party’s Victorian branch.

Transport

You pay $30 million to go nowhere – NSW Government is ploughing on with another billion-dollar rail project it can’t afford. Yesterday it outlined an imaginary route for an $8 billion link to Sydney’s west – Sydney Daily Telegraph

Opinion

Boneheads are back on the streets – Michael Stutchbury asks in The Australian if there could be be anything more bone-headed than the Australian Manufacturing Workers Union vowing to set the pace for a national wage round of more than 4 per cent just as business is trying to avoid a wave of job layoffs that would push the unemployment rate above 8 per cent?

Tax cuts we can well do without – Ross Gittins in the Sydney Morning Herald on the cuts applying from today

NSW Liberals bottom of the class – Janet Albrechtsen writes in The Australian that last week, under leader Barry O’Farrell, the NSW parlizamentary party showed it has no commitment to core Liberal Party values.

Pollies pig out as families suffer – David Penberthy in the Sydney Daily Telegraph on a new meal allowance perk for NSW MPs

NSW Labor stretches feasibility – says editorial in the Sydney Daily Telegraph. Given the Government’s new approach, we can expect a whole raft of thrilling new unaffordable dream projects to be announced in coming weeks.

Rudd puts a bomb under diplomacy – Daniel Flitton in the Melbourne Age argues we need to regularly articulate our approach to foreign affairs.

Pricing policy needs teeth if it’s to really benefit consumers – Nicole Rich and Sean Carroll in the Melbourne Age say supermarkets must not be allowed to hijack the unit pricing scheme.

Elsewhere

Economic matters

UK economy shrinking at fastest rate in more than 50 yearsThe Guardian, UK

Iran

Mahmoud Ahmadinejad warns of revenge on pro-democracy states – Iran’s hardline President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has warned the regime would seek revenge against states it has accused of fanning pro-democracy demonstrations in the wake of its disputed election – London Daily Telegraph

Malaysia

For all Malaysians: new PM abandons ethnic capitalismSydney Morning Herald

Malaysia in major liberalisation drive – Financial Times of London

Michael Jackson

Michael Jackson’s funeral to be held at Neverland RanchLondon Daily Telegraph

BUSINESS

PNG bank’s Pacific buying spree in bid to rival majorsThe Australian

Year of financial hell ends with optimism – Brisbane Courier Mail

Lippy and gloss revitalise David Jones – Sydney Morning Herald

Retail rides a wave of confidence – Melbourne Age

ENVIRONMENT

Car makers urge caution on emission limits Sydney Morning Herald

MEDIA

Readers pay a price for authors’ greed – Tim Wilson in The Australian writes that the campaign by wealthy Australian authors such as Tim Winton and Bryce Courtenay against reforms that would enable Australians to buy cheaper books is all about feathering their nests and has nothing to do with protecting Australian culture.

China thinks twice – and its 300m internet users scent a rare victoryThe Guardian, UK

LIFE

Consumer affairs

Smart meters to lift power costs – Householders could be forced to fork out hundreds of dollars for electricity “smart meters” so the Government can charge them more for power at peak times – Brisbane Courier Mail

Safety recalls take food off shelvesSydney Morning Herald

Fraudsters target electricity and gas contractsThe Australian

The drink

Victoria Bitter to be sold with less alcoholMelbourne Herald Sun

Laneway bar reaches a dead end – Sydney’s attempt at creating a laneway bar culture has been stalled, after one of the first new bars closed after two weeks and can reopen only if it uses main-road access – Sydney Morning Herald

The drugs

Territory hospitals slap a ban on gaspersNorthern Territory News

Swine flu

Doctors brace as flus run rampantAdelaide Advertiser

Sporting life

Carlton Blues boot John Elliott over footy rape scandal – Carlton banished former president John Elliott over his explosive “hush money” rape allegations – Melbourne Herald Sun

Final humiliation for Elliott as Blues dump him – Melbourne Age

Home bodies

Gen why bother moving out – The “boomerang generation” is thriving and the reason home is so attractive is not just financial but the domestic services – Sydney Morning Herald

Gambling

Two people win Oz Lotto $106 million jackpotBrisbane Courier Mail