This article is by Climate Spectator Tristan Edis.
http://www.climatespectator.com.au/commentary/abbott-s-problems-go-far-beyond-misogyny?
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There’s been a lot of debate in the media about whether or not Tony Abbott is a misogynist, even extending to an American style intervention by his wife and daughter. You know we’re in trouble in this country when family members, rather than policy, become front and centre in our political debate.
But where’s the debate about Abbott’s lack of policy detail?
Our chart of the week is a little unconventional in that it is nothing fancy, just your stock standard utility bill. Except it seems that Tony Abbott, nor his legion of advisers, nor the pensioner whose bill it was, seemed capable of interpreting it properly.
The failure for Abbott to do even the most simple of analysis on this occasion is in fact illustrative of a much broader problem – his lack of attention to detail.
Eighty-two-year-old pensioner Hetty Verolme of Perth, received a rather unpleasant shock when she opened her electricity bill for August and found it had gone up by $800, a 70 per cent rise relative to her last bill. She immediately concluded it must be due to the carbon tax and sent it straight through to Tony Abbott’s office in support of his campaign to “axe the tax”.
Abbott took Hetty’s carbon tax complaint straight into Parliament House, brandishing her bill while asking Prime Minister Julia Gillard:
“With an $800 increase in just one bill of which 70 per cent is due to the carbon tax how can the prime minister possibly claim that Hetty Verolme’s compensation is in any way adequate?”
One problem, the predominant reason for the increase in Hetty’s bill was that her electricity consumption for the August bill had about doubled compared to her previous bill.
Not only that, but the text that sits to the left of the usage comparison chart explains that rather than electricity prices going up 70 per cent as Abbott claimed, it was in fact 9.13 per cent stating:
“From 1 July 2012 electricity prices will increase. This includes 2.255c/unit for Synergy’s estimate of its costs for the federal government’s carbon price, Synergy’s allowable return and GST. This represents an estimated increase of 9.13 per cent for an average daily usage of 15.89 units.”
Tony ‘I’m not a tech head’ Abbott has for the most part got away with this lack of attention to detail because he has largely bent with the winds of the tabloid media in their sensationalist coverage around cost of living pressures. This coverage has been largely rubbish, as any cursory review of the Australian Bureau of Statistics’ inflation data would reveal.
But Abbott has learnt well from his baptism of fire as press secretary for John Hewson in the unlosable 1993 election; and then Howard’s subsequent success in 1996 with his small target strategy.
He has been a brilliant opposition leader to date because of his mastery of the Keep It Simple Stupid principle. Abbott knows that the ability to get a message across in the media from opposition is incredibly constrained. Messages must be simple, short, small in number, repeated regularly, and shaped around, not against, the predominant flow of news coverage.
No point talking about a serious problem if the media aren’t already covering it. And even if something isn’t really a problem, if the media think it is, then just go with it.
So rather than focus on poor regulation of electricity networks, that have been used to raise state government revenues by stealth; rant and rave about a carbon tax which is actually a necessary and efficient economic reform.
And instead of focussing on Australia’s ridiculously poor productivity in the construction sector due to union tactics (which mean we pay 50 to 100 per cent what the US does for things like power stations, high rise buildings and new industrial plant); talk about boat people stealing our jobs.
This is has worked well for Abbott so far. But when questioned on detail, Abbott falls apart. He fell apart when Kerry O’Brien got into detail on broadband. He fell apart when Leigh Sales got into detail about Olympic Dam and the mining and carbon taxes. And so far he is running scared from Lateline’s Tony Jones, turning down every one of the program’s repeated requests for interviews.
As John Hewson sagely observed at an ANU conference of Australian economists, “Tony Abbott is the best…….opposition leader Australia has ever had. I just don’t know what he’d be like as prime minister.”
I suspect that the electorate’s poor opinion of Tony Abbott is as much a reflection of John Hewson’s observation as anything to do with perceptions of misogyny. Until he demonstrates a grip on policy detail, serious questions will hang over Abbott’s capability to lead this country.
I dunno about these electrickery prices! My last bill was up by 90 percent, even though my consumption only rose 60%… I think the electrickery companies are using this as an opportunity to gouge as much as they possibly can from their customers…
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Mine rose over 40% with the state government trying to blame the carbon tax, there was a slight increase in usage however when I looked into it more deeper there was a gouge by the electricity company to recoup the cost of the poles and wire which accounted fro the bulk of the increase.
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Is there anything we can do about this, do you think Algae, or are we forced to wear it?
My last bill was for $857… I had to get a centrelink advance to pay for it and that advance will take six months to pay off… I’m dreading my next few electrickery bills, I can tell you!
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Mine went from $650 to $1050. Our summer and winter bills are the biggest We’re nothing more than pawns in a political game I’m afraid Asty. What pisses me of though is that our state government points out the increase in red on the bill then hides the cost that they are adding. The carbon tax for that increase was $70 so where did the other $330 come from?
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My thoughts entirely Algae… no wonder us poor bastards can’t get ahead! Hard enough just treading water and staying afloat!
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They have been doing that for at least 4 years on a grand scale. Biggest overkill.
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This time was the biggest though vivienne. Nearly fell of my chair when I got the bill and the weight of the propaganda that accompanied it.
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Same here, but we bought a small outdoor spa, back in April. i had put the huge increase down to keeping a tonne of water warm, but the bugger’s being changed over to solar, as soon as I can!
Our suburb is ‘lucky’ enough to be part of a Smart meter experiment. Who knows what the cost of power will be once they initiate charging for peak times???
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I bet you all have electric hot water storage systems. They are usually the reason for high electricity bills. We have instantaneous hot water that runs on gas. Our last electricity bill was $350.- mainly due to electric blankets and electric heater in Bedr. and bathroom.. We cook and heat on gas with two large flued gas heaters in the lounge-dining-kitchen area.The gas bill comes to around $350- in winter and about $150.- during summer.
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We just replaced the electric off peak with an instantaneous gas ‘enviro’ system, which uses bugger all gas. The bloody electric system was almost new when we moved in, but, as usual was just out off the guarantee when it started to play up. I don’t think builders are allowed to install them in new houses, anymore.
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So, your overall bill was $700. We are all electric (no gas here to connect to) and buy in firewood. Electricity was $300 more than same time last year. Our consumption was a tiny bit more than previous. Off peak water is quite good. GST soaring too of course. And other charges keep going up. There is not a lot we can do to reduce usage. Had the radiant radiator on more than usual as it was so cold and we ran out of wood. Can’t win.
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I have little time for Slipper, his comments were which led to his resignation where disgusting.
However, he held the position of speaker. The position of speaker is a privileged position within the Australian parliament and in the end he did the right thing and resigned. In resigning he left the position and its creditability in tact. I don’t know whether or not the allegations against Slipper are true or not or what creditability his accuser has. Given that the are allegations of under age sex against that person, there are mighty big questions. The court is the correct place for this to be aired no the parliament. The Nazi party prostitutes the parliament by trying to make it such. The antics last Tuesday on that are unconscionable.
I read today that Slipper was in an agitated state when Oakshott and Windsor visited him and gave him a dignified way out of this. I read also that several politicians where concerned about him to visit him to make sure he was OK, a Chaplain was also called to ensure his safety. Is this what we really want with the opposition, people pushed to the point of suicide. Yet this is what the Nazis appear to want, power at any cost and if someone kills themselves then that is perfectly OK.
I also read those who questioned the timing of the PM absolutely brilliant speech. Watching her filleting Adolf Turd and seeing him squirm in his chair was also brilliant and his front bench just sitting there stunned utterly stunned. The shit sandwiches must have tasted mighty awful I suspect. But when was the best time to deliver a speech like that. How often do you put up with the filth he peddles, the comments across the dispatch box, the hateful signs then parroting the parrots offensive words that even the parrot has stated that their use then was offensive before you say enough is enough.
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In a milder political landscape and while staring at Milo, I sometimes imagine a scene whereby the government of J.Gillard is actually getting some praise here and there. I mean local praise and I mean from the opposition.
Is civility and normal behaviour so far gone that people on the other side of the floor cannot accede and graciously give credit for some of the good things that have been achieved? I don’t expect T.Abbott to cross the floor and shake hands with Gillard on the achievement of getting the carbon tax through or kiss Roxon on her plain packaging of cigarettes world first milestone legislation. But for Australia to have survived the economic downturn, the persistently low unemployment figures, the unbelievable low debt levels, a compliment or a friendly nod of approval could be nice and not ‘out of order’ as is so often shouted around the chamber.
There is Greece with unemployment rising to over 25%, Spain on 20 % with both suffering almost unbelievable debt burdens, junk bonds, credit ratings of minus zero and rivers of despair seeping down the mountains. Millions doing it rough in the US, living in trailer parks, soup kitchens and bearded desperadoes and vagrants with torn blankets and dulled eyes… munching on scraps.
No, in Australia praise is not forthcoming and I don’t understand how people as humans cannot be big enough to sometimes give it freely, just like that and without rancour or cynicism, just a spontaneous ‘good on ye’, well done Julia, or that’s been great ALP… Could someone in the opposition sometimes say something of praise?
It’s just not there is it?. . Perhaps that’s politics but it’s not very uplifting.
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Watching the Biden/Ryan debate was interesting in that it was so civil, it would not easily be like that in Australia. Why is this so? Even Obama/Romney exchanges never got ugly, like they do here between Labor and the Coalition.
Someone wrote on The Drum, you always got to be on offence, yet this bloke has often spoken about how it is to be a teacher in Oz, why would a teacher be in an attack mode at all times. Go figure.
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The just rush out to tell these lies about the carbon tax don’t they. You’d think someone in his office might just do the idiot test before sticking their feet in their mouth.
Our local member the totally useless John Alexander managed to get up in the Parliament and tell hither and yon that the carbon tax was going to stop people from playing netball because the council was putting charges up by 25%. This had to do with funding council officers. fired off a letter to the local rag asking him to recant the lie he told in the parliament. Council managed to back down on their increase and rebutted Alexander by saying the proposed increases had nothing to do with the Carbon Tax.
I can see TA being a modern day Billy McMahon should he ever make PM. You can see him making security calls to international power at the local telephone box because you can’t trust anybody.
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The rolling out of Abbott having a wife and three daughters was supposed to prove he is a feminist? What does one expect, that he hasn’t gone on a rampage and kicked a woman in the groin somewhere?
What a bizarre spectacle.Of course the world of tweets went for it.
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Gez, I think that the reporters interviewing Tony need to better recognise his Neanderthal qualities and perhaps ask him about his policy to stop woolly mammoths going extinct and his policy on supporting the arts – like cave painting, and defence acquisition of state of the art rocks and clubs and whether any lower order primate should be allowed to go caveless just because they are lower order.
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‘Turn back the canoes, Grog’…’Different apes take mammoth…take women…take cave….charcoal tax ruin village!’
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Big, classic ! A charcoal tax – what’s that going to do for cave art ?
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Charcoal tax bad for all, not just drawing. Bad for tribe, make women not have babies…make fire hard to make…make fruit harder to pick…make mammoth run away!
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And Gillard’s family?
Strewn around; the flotsam of other women’s, left in her wake.
Flotsam to her anyways. How many homes has she broken. She should write in here; it’s named after her!
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Marriages break up, no one breaks them….no one breaks up a HAPPY marriage.
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You’re just not trying hard enough Persecuted. Why don’t you say what you really want to. Why don’t you add your full voice to the chorus of anti-Gillard hecklers. Try and string a few coherent compound sentences together. If that’s too hard then perhaps just some more of your somewhat obscure and ill informed comments would suffice.
The least it would do would be to add some sport to the site and we might be able to work out what you mean. At the moment your heart just doesn’t seem to be in it.
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You’ll have to put up with the cryptic version. Think: Picasso’s dog: Le Chien.
It’s just to stop the echo of your own voices….All dressed up in pontification – and nowhere to go
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I’ll get it down to two words eventually.
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Picasso’s dog? You can lump it.
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“-and nowhere to go.”
That seems to be your problem, too much time, and not much else, no one listening to you.
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Why are you writing drivel?
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One line
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Penny’s dropped. I get it. It’s not that I’m dumb. I’m just a little slow.
But you’ll find that abstract verbal condensates require a little more effort to get the pungency I suspect you’re after. What’s more, if you’re relying on common semiotic understanding to sell your one liners, you’re better off picking the simplest, best known memes and symbols. Otherwise people may not “get” the brilliance you’re gracing us with.
Good effort, but further improvement is needed. C+
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