THE FRONT PAGES

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POLITICS AND ECONOMICS

Australia

Manufacturing

More factory closures on the way – Australia’s manufacturing sector faces further heavy job losses and factory closures similar to Bridgestone Tyres, a leading Rudd Government adviser has warned. Two of the country’s most powerful union leaders have also called on Prime Minister Kevin Rudd to do more to protect a struggling sector that has shed 77,000 jobs in the last year – Adelaide Advertiser

Consumer protection

Banks send customers’ personal details overseas – Angry customers are urging the Federal Government to stop the big banks from sending their personal details to offshore processing centres – Brisbane Courier Mail

Lift your game or we act, warns Conroy – Communications Minister, Stephen Conroy, has threatened telecommunications companies with a legislative crackdown unless they dramatically improve customer service – Melbourne Age

Immigration

091026ssmhrefugeesIndonesia threatens detainees with forcePolice say they will use force if hunger-striking Sri Lankan asylum seekers refuse to leave an Australian Customs ship expected to dock today at the Indonesian port of Tanjung Pinang, where they will be housed in a heavily guarded detention centre – Sydney Morning Herald

Christmas Island asylum seekers hit 1148 – Christmas Island has received its third boatload of asylum seekers in four days – The Australian

Tamil Tigers join race for asylum – A senior member of the Australian Tamil community says former Tamil Tiger fighters are definitely among the influx of boatpeople to arrive on our shores – The Australian

Rudd’s ‘Indonesia solution’ could be lifesaver – Kevin Rudd’s “Indonesia solution” has been given the provisional thumbs-up from key players in the refugee lobby, who say intercepting asylum-seekers in the archipelago could save lives. As new details about the controversial approach began to emerge, Refugee Council president John Gibson cautiously welcomed the deepening partnership with Jakarta – The Australian

Attendances at mosque swell on Christmas Island – Asylum-seekers at Christmas Island’s immigration detention centre have begun attending Friday prayers with locals at the island’s mosque, following requests from detainees and refugee advocates – The Australian

Economic matters

Business demands government investment in infrastructure – Business is demanding federal and state governments plan and invest in a new wave of infrastructure reform to avoid port bottlenecks, city congestion, urban water shortages and bad freight systems choking off Australia’s next era of economic prosperity – The Australian

Leadership

Top Lib demands loyalty to Baillieu – Victorian Liberal kingmaker Philip Davis has told disgruntled Liberal MPs to stop undermining Opposition Leader Ted Baillieu, saying there will be no change of leader before next year’s election and they should concentrate on defeating Labor and installing Mr Baillieu as premier – Melbourne Age

Elections

Fat cats snuff out criticism of Rudd Government programs – The Rudd Government has been accused of censoring voter handouts which are critical of controversial programs such as its $42 billion economic stimulus package – Sydney Daily Telegraph

Transport

$5b metro counting on ghost passengers – The State Government agency building Sydney’s controversial $5.3 billion City Metro has vastly overestimated the number of people who will use the service, official figures reveal – Sydney Morning Herald

Opinions

091026smhgittinsInterest rates head list of woes in our paradise – Ross Gittins writes in the Sydney Morning Herald that The next drawback of an only-mild recession is that we can’t be as sure as we were that concern about inflation can stay on the back burner.

Foreign speculation on our currency is a bubble set to burst – Kenneth Davidson in the Melbourne Age says Australia should should follow Brazil’s lead and impose a tax on incoming capital.

A new battleline for Liberal ideas – Glenn Milne writes in The Australian how Liberal Senator George Brandis has given a fundamental critique of the Howard legacy and drawn a line in the sand against any future incarnation of the party as a continuation of that legacy through Tony Abbott.

Demonising ourselves – David Burchell in The Australian sees the same unreal arguments – founded on this same vague if powerful sense of empathy – are once again taking hold in the boat people discussions. He notes that It is not mere political necessity that drives the government to dissuade people from taking to boats chiefly in the hope of a new life in a rich country. There is also the policy necessity to maintain the refugee intake within manageable limits.

Kevin Rudd gets two economic jolts – Michael Stutchbury in The Australian argues the Rudd government has been given two big wake-up calls to urgently shift from the politics of the global financial crisis to the challenge of rapid economic growth on the back of China. The first is the Business Council of Australia’s damning assessment that, for all his talk about nation-building and rapid population growth, Kevin Rudd’s infrastructure program is not up to scratch. The second wake-up call comes from news that Bridgestone will close its 44-year-old Adelaide tyre manufacturing plant which employs 600 workers.

The daunting task of making policy fruitful – The BCA’s report from Port Jackson Partners throws stark light on how much of the debate so far has been just talk writes Lenore Taylor in The Australian

Infrastructure a key to populate and be prosperous – Rod Sims in The Australian says that debate is again surfacing over whether Australia can sustain a much higher population, now of 35 million, and also whether Australia can facilitate high economic growth and so manage prosperity.

Smith stays calm amid the storm – Phillip Coorey in the Sydney Morning Herald says Foreign Minister Stephen Smith can sometimes be more effective than his boss, who, when not in control of events, struggles for a while to find his line and length.

Elsewhere

Afghanistan

NATO Ministers Endorse Wider Afghan Effort – Defense ministers from NATO on Friday endorsed the ambitious counterinsurgency strategy for Afghanistan proposed by Gen. Stanley A. McChrystal, giving new impetus to his recommendation to pour more troops into the eight-year-old war – New York Times

Defence Minister John Faulkner reaffirms Australia’s commitment to AfghanistanMelbourne Herald Sun

Iraq

Iraq Ministries Targeted in Car Bombings; Over 130 Dead – For the second time in two months, synchronized suicide car bombings struck at the heart of the Iraqi government, severely damaging the Justice Ministry and Provincial Council complexes in Baghdad on Sunday, killing at least 132 people and raising fresh questions about the government’s ability to secure its most vital operations – New York Times

Freedom of speech

Gay marriage fight fuels debate over petitioners’ rights – The fierce fight over same-sex marriage in California and elsewhere is creating pressure to recognize a new free-speech right that could keep petition signatures secret – Los Angeles Times

BUSINESS

091026agebusinessBanks squeal regulator’s plans will be too harsh – Only  months after the financial crisis, Australian banks say the banking regulator is taking too hard a line in proposed measures to improve confidence – Melbourne Age

ANZ promises to toe the line on rates – ANZ Bank has promised not to slug its 800,000 home borrowers with variable rate hikes outside of official moves by the Reserve Bank – Melbourne Herald Sun

ENVIRONMENT

$50bn in ETS slush fund, says Coalition – Kevin Rudd is creating a $50billion political slush fund under an emissions trading scheme and must explain how the revenue will be used, the Coalition has warned – The Australian

MEDIA

Nasty saga you nearly missed – Paul Sheehan in the Sydney Morning Herald tells the story of the involvement of the Sydney Daily Telegraph in having a Lebanese Australian removed as the Liberal candidate for the Federal seat of Cook

Advertising recovery boosts ‘old media’ – According to ad revenue consultancy Standard Media Index, in the year to September 30 local newspapers garnered a 19.5 per cent share of the spending of the main media agencies, which was a small increase on their January 2007 share of 19.42 per cent. Radio also increased its share, from 7.41 per cent to 7.85 per cent, and magazines dropped back slightly from 8.87 per cent to 7.24 per cent. Digital’s share of expenditure grew most strongly, from 5 per cent to 8.29 per cent, most of it taken from the TV sector, which dropped from a 51 per cent share to 49.04 per cent – The Australian

Parting shot as press chief quits – The retiring head of the Australian Press Council has hit out at publishers for failing to ensure accuracy, fairness and balance, and has called for a review of the accountability of editors. In a hard-hitting, and what is sure to be controversial, farewell chairman’s report to be released this week, Ken McKinnon nominates editorial standards as a matter of “substantial concern” – The Australian

LIFE

Death

Cemetery land crisis forces radical NSW State Government burial solution – Large burial sites of unmarked graves on privately-owned farmland are being considered by the State Government as part of a radical plan to address a critical shortage of cemetery space – Sydney Daily Telegraph

Asbestos payout crisis as James Hardie’s $1.8bn fund about to run out – The $1.8 billion fund set up by James Hardie to pay for thousands of asbestos victims is about to run out of money, allowing the corporate giant to delay payments to the dying – Sydney Daily Telegraph

Cycling

091026advertisercyclists148,000 cyclists demand better deal A Federal Government survey shows cycling participation increased 43 per cent in South Australia last year and Bicycle SA chief executive Christian Haag said it was now more popular than swimmingAdelaide Advertiser

Cyclists in T-way brawl with bus driver – A cyclist illegally riding on a T-Way lane in Sydney’s northwest followed a bus, boarded the vehicle at a bus stop and then bashed the 64-year-old driver – Sydney Daily Telegraph

Breast cancer

Breast cancer report shows more diagnoses but fewer fatalities – The number of breast cancer-related deaths fell by 27 per cent between 1994 and 2006, with only 22 fatalities per 100,000 women – The Australian

Education

Aboriginal leaders seek role in national curriculum – Indigenous leaders, academics and educators are angered by a lack of consultation in the development of the national school curriculum, which they argue relegates Aboriginal people and their culture to “historical artifacts” – The Australian

Dangers at play in uniform preschool learning – Childcare centres that make kids wear uniforms and recite the alphabet are robbing them of their childhood, leading educators warned yesterday – The Australian

Julia Gillard goes to the principal’s office – for advice – Julia Gillard is to invite 150 school principals from around the country to Canberra to get their feedback on the next steps in her “Education Revolution” – Adelaide Advertiser

Abortion

Abortion women told: get a lawyer – Women having abortions arising from birth defects or other medical problems will be advised by the Queensland government to get their own legal advice on whether they risk criminal prosecution – The Australian

Law and order

Crime gangs plot Cup raid – Police intelligence indicates a swarm of sharply dressed thieves and frauds is already in Melbourne, or about to arrive, to prey on the 400,000 racegoers expected to attend the four-day racing festival – Melbourne Herald Sun

Language

Green words leave their mark on Macquarie – Gugb y League transgressions and climate change now affect the way Australians speak. The latest edition of the Macquarie Dictionary includes ”bunning”, the former low-profile football slang word for group sex that entered the vernacular this year after Matthew Johns’ involvement in a 2002 Christchurch sex scandal became public. And the word ”green”, which started life in the 1981 first edition of the dictionary with two humble entries, ”green ban” and ”greenie”, has gone pandemic in 2009 – Sydney Morning Herald

Charity

Charities hand over up to 95% to street marketers – Charities such as Oxfam, Red Cross and the Fred Hollows Foundation hand over up to 95 per cent of money raised on the streets in the first year of a pledge to a marketing company – Sydney Morning Herald

Health

Canberra looks at GP bonus plan – General practitioners will get tens of thousands of dollars in bonus payments for meeting performance benchmarks, under a British-style scheme the Federal Government is considering – Melbourne Age