THE PICK OF THE MORNING’S STORIES

090708eveningstandardMichael Jackson taken to last concert The body of Michael Jackson was this evening taking centre stage at a memorial concert in Los Angeles for his final send-off – London Evening Standard

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POLITICS AND ECONOMICS

Australia

Banking

090708agebankingCurb the banks, PM told – The growing power of Australia’s biggest banks has been targeted by six influential economists who have petitioned the Prime Minister and the Treasurer to set up an inquiry into Australia’s financial system – the first in more than a decade Melbourne Age

Interest Rates

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Reserve Bank still has rate cut option – Reserve Bank is holding open the option of further interest rate cuts later this year in case the surge in consumer spending and confidence collapses once the government’s cash handouts have been spent – The Australian

Reserve Bank keeps rates on holdMelbourne Age

Reserve Bank Governor’s statement

Reserve Bank of Australia leaves interest rates at 3 per centAdelaide Advertiser

Wages

Wages freeze to protect jobs as Julia Gillard and unions furious at decisionThe Australian

Low-paid income will drop: Gillard – The Australian

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Fair Pay Commission rules out rise for lowest-paid workersAdelaide Advertiser

Low-paid workers hit by freeze on wagesMelbourne Age

Economic matters

World needs to be saved from spending spree: PMThe Australian

Politicians hit the road with a truckload of rhetoricSydney Morning Herald

Police stations for sale in suburban crime hotspots – Sydney Daily Telegraph

Sainthood

Opposition anger at Rudd’s saintly advocacy – Liberal frontbencher Tony Abbott said that only a prime minister who “thinks not a sparrow should fall without him influencing it would lobby the Pope on such a matter” as Mary McKillop’s sainthood – Melbourne Age

Leadership

WA Premier Barnett takes the razor off Treasurer – WA Premier Colin Barnett has taken control of the government’s most important economic committee, which oversees the government’s razor gang, in a rebuke to Treasurer Troy Buswell – The Australian

South Australian Liberal leadership contenders tarred by brush with fake papersThe Australian

Housing

Cash for homeless released – Canberra yesterday announced the first downpayment on its national homelessness pact with the states and territories, just hours after coming under fire for failing to deliver on the funding promised to the homeless – The Australian

Aboriginal affairs

Govt pushes Bagot to be normal suburbNorthern Territory News

Opinion

It takes more than just a strong leader to win over voters – Shaun Carney in the Melbourne Age argues that People want ideas and policy and the Liberals presently have neither.

Pay freeze trades off money for jobs – Michelle Grattan in the Melbourne Age notes that the short-lived Fair Pay Commission is ending as it began: with a surprise packet. In its first decision, the commission, part of WorkChoices, delivered a bigger-than-anticipated rise. Now, as it goes out the back door, its final decision has come in at zero – below expectations.

Pay attention, or be bamboozled by bread and circuses – Ross Gittins muses about the similarities between political contests and market competition

Ruddbot’s gatecrashing upsets Papal Skills – Annabel Crabb in the Sydney Morning Herald writes that the suggestion that Kevin Rudd would be lobbying for the Mary MacKillop ticket was too much for Tony Abbott – Parliament’s best known Catholic – to bear.

A test for more humane strategy – Paul Kelly in The Australian writes that Kevin Rudd and Stephen Smith now seek to validate the deepest conventional wisdom about unauthorised boat arrivals, that the essence of the solution lies in regional agreements with our Southeast Asian neighbours.

Liberals must defend Howard legacy – Janet Albrechtsen has a swipe at Joe Hockey for some remarks on the Howard government and tax

Harper’s ruling will save thousands – Michael Stutchbury in The Australian writes it has taken a final act of principle from John Howard’s Fair Pay Commission to deliver the blindingly obvious policy truth: that it is madness to force business to pay more to employ low-skilled workers during the deepest downturn in the world economy since the 1930s.

Steady as she goes – we hope – Terry McCrann writes in the Melbourne Herald Sun that some low-paid workers might have been saved from losing their jobs.

Elsewhere

Funerals

King is dead, long live his royalties – For the many fans gathering to watch the Michael Jackson memorial service from the Staples Center in Los Angeles it was about celebrating 50 extraordinary years. But for the lawyers circling his estate, Jackson’s death meant the start of a battle to win control of a fortune worth hundreds of millions of dollars – Sydney Morning Herald

Michael Jackson taken to last concert – The body of Michael Jackson was this evening taking centre stage at a memorial concert in Los Angeles for his final send-off – London Evening Standard

Elections

Yudhoyono set to sweep Indonesian poll Melbourne Age

World financial crisis

Rudd warns of second recession – Speaking in Berlin on the eve of the Group of Eight talks in Italy, PM Kevin Rudd joined British counterpart Gordon Brown to argue that it is too early for industrialised nations to pull back on fiscal stimulus measures – Melbourne Age

Russia and the USA

Obama: US and Russia not destined to be adversariesThe Independent, UK

Urumqui and China

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Urumqi Sweeps Up after Deadly Rioting – Order had returned to Urumqi but most shops remained closed and Internet links were still cut two days after a July 5 riot – By staff reporters Li Weiao and Zhu Tao of Caijing.com.cn

Economic matters

Bulgarian stress test for the Balkans – The Baltic trio of Latvia, Lithuania, and Estonia are lucky. At the end of the day, they can count on Swedish banks and the full might of the Swedish state to shield them from economic disaster.The picture is messier in the Balkans, a region with eight times the population (55m) and no obvious Big Brother at hand, and messiest of all is Bulgaria – London Daily Telegraph

Leadership

Shortage of candidates to replace unpopular Aso adds to LDP’s woes Mainichi Daily News

Opinion

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From profits to ethics: pope calls for a new political and financial world order – • Global recession caused by greed, says pontiff; • Economic crisis is ‘clear proof of effects of sin’ – The Guardian

BUSINESS

Rio Tinto executives detained in China – the arrest of Rio Tinto’s iron ore sales team – including an Australian – by authorities in Shanghai comes against the background of recent bitter negotiations over iron ore sale contracts and Chinese anger over Rio Tinto’s decision earlier this year to abandon a $US19.5 billion merger with state-owned Chinalco – Melbourne Age

Profit season looming as worst for 20 yearsSydney Morning Herald

Centrebet flags strong profit growthThe Australian

Madden steps in to vet Williamstown tower plan – Melbourne Age

ENVIRONMENT

We need collective climate plan: Kevin RuddThe Australian

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Town in bottled water ban – NSW Southern Highlands village of Bundanoon is poised to become the first town in Australia, and quite possibly the world, to ban commercially bottled water – Melbourne Age

Seabed mining threat to humpback whalesSydney Daily Telegraph

Tropics on move south causing drier winters, more cyclonesBrisbane Courier Mail

Clean coal plant set to go ahead – a coal-to-liquids plant for the Latrobe Valley promises to produce cleaner coal, reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 40 per cent and extract thousands of barrels of high-grade oil – Melbourne Age

MEDIA

Coalition may talk to editors – the Sydney Morning Herald reports that State Opposition remains opposed to school league tables but could be prepared to back away from fines for newspapers that publish school results. The Premier, Nathan Rees, will reintroduce the league tables legislation to Parliament after the winter break.

LIFE

Health

Drug side effects growing problemMelbourne Age

Asperger’s

The curious incident of the straight-A student – Alex Goodenough was the cleverest kid in his school – so why didn’t he get a sixth form place? Decca Aitkenhead of The Guardian talks to his family about the impact of Asperger’s

Swine flu

If you’ve got flu, you’ve got swine fluMelbourne Age

Naval careers

Sex bets will cost recruits, says navyThe Australian

Police careers

Top cop ‘caught on tape’– A leading Territory police officer was stood down after a woman work colleague secretly tape recorded conversations with him, it was learnt last night – Northern Territory News

Law and order

Cyber crime link to social networkingBrisbane Courier Mail

Crime fighter ‘gave lawyer boyfriend drug case info’ – Brisbane Courier Mail

Cycling

How the Crikey indicator rates the chances:

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Parking

Forget petrol costs: Sydney shares world top billing for parking feesSydney Morning Herald

The drink

Eight is enough for a pub to be blackballed – the Sydney Morning Herald on the number of pubs and clubs that will have to take specific steps to curb violence on their premises

The fags

Even smokers agree: it’s time to feel the painSydney Morning Herald

Eggs

Stem cell researchers change call – Women could make money by selling their eggs for stem cell research under a proposal by one of the pioneers of Australia’s stem cell regulations – Melbourne Herald Sun

Child care

Childcare to cost more under new standardsBrisbane Courier Mail