James Bond fan Quiros proves he has license to thrill

Scotland (Reuters) – Spain’s Alvaro Quiros loves James Bond films and showed he had a license to thrill by driving three of the par-four holes on the way to a closing five-under 67 at the British Open on Sunday.

Three of his six birdies came at the ninth, 12th and 18th where he dispensed with the need for an approach shot, twice two-putting from 40 feet and once from just off the green.

But the tall, bearded Quiros, recognized as the European Tour’s longest hitter, admitted a sense of annoyance after walking off the hallowed turf of St Andrews.

“I feel a little bit of frustration because for the first three rounds I played well but my putting was not great,” he said after finishing high up the leaderboard with a five-under aggregate of 283.

“St Andrews is always a special venue. The history and of course those greens, the size of them, and the windy conditions. It’s been tough all week but that’s links golf.”

His solitary final-round blemish came when he drove out of bounds at the treacherous 618-yard 14th and made a bogey six after finding the green in two with his second ball.

Quiros, who has won four times on tour including this year’s Spanish Open, compiled rounds of 72, 70, and 74 earlier in the week and said the whole experience would put him in good stead for the 2011 British Open at Sandwich.

“It looks like I’m going to be a good player under the wind so that’s a help for sure,” said the 27-year-old.

“Certainly for the next Open.”

Govt defers solarium debate

The ACT Greens have attacked the Government for delaying their bill tightening restrictions on solariums.

The proposed laws would stop people under 18 and those with very fair skin from using solariums.

The Government has adjourned debate, saying it is planning to introduce national regulations.

Greens MLA Amanda Bresnan says that is a poor excuse.

“The national regulations have been promised for over two years, New South Wales and Victoria got sick of waiting, they went ahead with their own regulations and legislation,” she said.

“This is a preventative health measure ready to go but I don’t think it would have mattered what we put forward.

“The Government wouldn’t have supported it because they want to claim credit.”

Adele Carles questions her future with the Greens

Deep tensions remain in the W-A Greens following the public admission by Fremantle MP Adele Carle of an affair with the former Treasurer Troy Buswell.

Adele Carles returned to state parliament for the first time today since she fronted the media last week about her affair with Mr Buswell.

Ms Carles said she remained battered and bruised from the incident but would not be drawn on her future in the Greens.

“At this stage I’m not sure where I stand with the Greens, I honestly don’t know,” she said.

Senior Greens MP Giz Watson was also keen to put last week’s events behind her.

“Despite, you know, attempts to portray me as the baddie in this story, I just think it’s you know, we’re working together, we’re working out a way of moving forward,” she said.

“That’s how we work as Greens, its been very tough.”

Giz Watson says Ms Carles is not returning her phone calls.

Liberals open Parliament with no-confidence bid

The Tasmanian Opposition has moved a no-confidence motion against the new minority Labor Government in the first sitting of Parliament.

Labor lost its majority at the March 20 election, winning only 10 seats in the 25-member House of Assembly.

The Liberals expected to govern in minority because the party won the same number of seats as Labor but gained more votes.

During the campaign Premier David Bartlett said the party with the most votes should get the first opportunity to govern, but he was later asked by the Governor to test his government’s support on the floor of the House.

Opposition Leader Will Hodgman has accused Mr Bartlett of talking his way back into office by refusing to guarantee confidence in a Liberal minority government.

Mr Hodgman vented his anger on the first day of Parliament.

“I move that the House has no-confidence in the Premier or the Government he leads,” Mr Hodgman said.

The motion will be debated throughout the afternoon session but is doomed to fail because the Greens have backed Labor.

Earlier the Greens and Liberals teamed up to elect the Greens’ Tim Morris as Chairman of Committees and therefore Deputy Speaker, ahead of Labor’s Brenton Best.

Education showdown for new hung Parliament

The Tasmanian Opposition is looking to the Greens to support laws to roll back the Tasmania Tomorrow system for year 11 and 12 students.

The Liberals plan to table the bill during Tuesday’s first sitting of the new hung Parliament.

After a six month break from State Parliament the Liberals say they have drafted a bill to dismantle the Academy and Polytechnic and bring back the college system for years 11 and 12.

The Liberal Leader Will Hodgman says the new state Liberal MP Michael Ferguson is the architect of the bill.

“We would expect that the Greens will ascribe their support to it, consistent with their policy,” he said.

“The Education Minister Lin Thorp has ruled out rolling back Tasmania Tomorrow and starts consulting teachers about the problems on Tuesday.

“They are the people on the ground,” she said.

“They know what changes need to be made to make sure the system works effectively.”

The Greens support the roll-back and also want TAFE brought back.

Greens to have exclusive Internet domain name

Mumbai, April 22 (IANS) Very soon, the global green community will have its very own domain name on the Internet, according to the World Wide Fund For Nature (WWF).

The Internet Corporation for Assigned Names & Numbers (ICANN), responsible for creating domain endings like .com or .org, will soon initiate the process to create a whole bunch of new endings, including .eco.

This would enable those who want to proclaim their green credentials by adding a .eco ending to their website or even email address, the WWF said.

An email address or website that ends in .eco could also send powerful signals to all concerned that their owners are in some way eco-friendly, sustainable or green.

Accordingly, the WWF-International and many non-governmental organizations, individuals and others are devising ways to manage the .eco domain ending responsibly.

‘It’s critical that the rules for operating .eco – including who can buy names, how proceeds are used, what it stands for, and how a trust is maintained – are transparent, accountable, community-based and designed for the long-term benefit of people and the environment,’ the WWF-International said on its website.

Australian Fraser leads at fog-bound Ballantine’s

Australian Marcus Fraser was the clubhouse leader after fog wrecked the opening round of the $2.9 million Ballantine’s Championship on Thursday, leaving more than a third of field yet to hit a shot.

Six hours and 10 minutes of play were lost in total when fog descended on the European and Asian Tour co-sanctioned event on Jeju island, shrouding the Pinx Golf Club and severely restricting visibility.

Fraser prospered despite the conditions to shoot a superb seven-birdie 65 and top the leaderboard by a shot from Britain’s Mark Foster, who carded six-under-par 66.

“It was just one of those days where I felt like I did a lot of things right,” said the unheralded Australian. “It’s nice when the round turns out that way and would be even nicer if you can play like that all the time.”

Three-times major winner Ernie Els was also one of 36 players who finished their rounds and the South African managed a 68 for a share of sixth alongside Korean-American world number 10 Anthony Kim and several others.

“I stayed patient and I’m happy with how I played, I just didn’t score very well,” said Kim, who finished third at the U.S. Masters earlier this month.

“It’s going to be a long day tomorrow for the guys in front of us and we’re just going to hang in there and wait until we can go play some golf.

“The greens were very slow today. My last tournament was the Masters, so the greens were very fast there and here it’s slow. So it’s a little bit of an adjustment.”

PGA Championship winner Yang Yong-eun, fresh from his victory at last week’s China Open and playing on his home island, managed just one hole, shooting a birdie.

In addition to the players who failed to start, another large part of the field had not completed their rounds when play was suspended for poor light.

It will commence at 7am local time (2200 GMT) on Friday to try and clear the backlog.

“Tomorrow, if there’s no wind like now, you can really attack the golf course, so all depends on the weather,” said world number seven Els.

(Writing by Nick Mulvenney in Beijing, editing by Pritha Sarkar)

Offers on Cabinet posts ready

Power-sharing talks between the Tasmanian Premier and the Greens leader have broken up but there is no official word about the outcome.

David Bartlett and Nick McKim have been in and out of talks all day about the possibility of a Greens presence in Cabinet.

The Premier’s office says letters which have been drafted to go to the Greens are having final legal checks before being sent out this evening.

Mr McKim says he is reasonably comfortable on what he has seen on paper.

“I’m unable to say whether or not it will meet our expectations until after I’ve taken that legal advice and until after my party room has considered the final model,” he said.

The Premier is expected to hold a media conference late today.

Hidding bid for Speaker’s chair

The Tasmanian Liberals have attempted to enter power-sharing talks in the new hung parliament by nominating a former leader for the Speaker’s position.

The Liberals have challenged Labor and the Greens to accept former Liberal leader Rene Hidding as Speaker.

Opposition leader Will Hodgman says it is a test of his opponents’ sincerity about a co-operative approach.

“The difference between what I’m doing and what Labor and Greens are doing is that this is open, this is transparent,” he said.

“This is giving all representatives of the Tasmanian Parliament an opportunity to move forward and we believe this is a very positive opportunity for the Tasmanian Parliament.”

Mr Hodgman says the Liberals want to be constructive in opposition.

“But this will test Mr Bartlett and Mr McKim as to whether or not they’re serious about making our Parliament work.”

The announcement came as Premier David Bartlett and Greens leader Nick McKim met in Hobart to discuss the possibility of the new Cabinet, including a Greens minister.

Mr McKim says there were no offers or deals.

“[We are] just talking about how the process might go forward,” he said.

Mr Bartlett has declined to comment on the talks which will resume this afternoon.

Labor caucus meeting ends

The Tasmanian Government will make an announcement tomorrow about the appointment of ministries in the new Cabinet.

The caucus met for more than four hours today, it is understood the 10 members discussed who will get portfolios, and whether any of the five Greens MPs in the new hung parliament should get a ministry.

There is speculation the Greens could get up to two ministries, including the Premier’s Education portfolio.

In a three-line statement Mr Bartlett said:

“Labor wants to make this Government and this Parliament work.”

Boosting legal services would save money: Greens

The ACT Greens are pushing the Government to establish a legal centre for people with mental health problems and boost funding for community legal centres.

Greens MLA Shane Rattenbury says many people are struggling to access legal help because they cannot afford a lawyer or qualify for legal aid.

He says the Government has an obligation to help them.

“There are people in our community who cannot access lawyers and the legal system when they need it the most, when they’re facing a crisis in their life, when they’re having a significant problem,” he said.

“People need to be able to access the legal system and at the moment they can’t.”

Mr Rattenbury acknowledges the Government is in a tight financial situation but he says the changes would save money in the long term.

“We know that for every dollar spent in a community legal centre more than $100 is saved later in the justice system overall,” he said.

“It’s also about helping those people who are most vulnerable in our community.

“This is money we have to spend if we want to have a just and fair city.”

Labor urged to abandon Tarkine Road

An environmental group wants Labor to formally abandon its Tarkine Road plan.

The $23 million project is being assessed by the Federal Government, and still needs approval by State Parliament.

Scott Jordan from the Tarkine Coalition says it is clear legislation for the road has no chance of making it through parliament.

“Our expectation would be that both the Liberal party with 10 votes and the Greens with five votes have run campaigns against the road,” he said.

“So our feeling would be that there’s now 15 votes against, and only 10 for, so we would expect that the Tarkine Road is finished.”

Mr Jordan says a Tarkine National Park would have the support of the community.

“It will be a great driver for tourism and for jobs in the local region,” he said.

“We think now that the heat of the election is over, we’d like to think that all three parties can sit down and look at it as something that’s positive for the region, positive for the environment and is a win all around.”

Libs call for Treasurer’s resignation

The Tasmanian Liberals say the Labor Treasurer Michael Aird must resign, if the Premier David Bartlett appoints a Minister from the Greens.

Last August Mr Aird vowed never to serve in a government that had any Greens in it, words that could soon return to haunt him.

Labor now has only 10 seats out of 25 in the Lower House.

The Greens have pledged not to back any no confidence motion in the Government; now there is speculation they could win up to two ministries, after their leader Nick McKim met David Bartlett yesterday.

The Liberals’ Peter Gutwein says Mr Aird must be prepared to stick to his word and quit.

“Otherwise, once again, this is another example of the deceit and lies that this Labor Government will stoop to,” he said.

The Greens will not comment on what was discussed yesterday.

But there is speculation their Lyons MHA Tim Morris could be given the local government portfolio.

The Government is yet to respond.

If only Aussies could putt

Geoff Ogilvy and Adam Scott would be in contention at the Masters if they did not have to putt.

They do not hand out green jackets for hitting greens in regulation, however, which is why another Masters will pass without an Australian victory.

Ogilvy and Scott could only lament similar tales of woe after struggling on the greens in the third round at Augusta National.

Ogilvy did not drop a shot, but squandered several golden birdie chances for an ultimately unsatisfying 3-under-par 69 that left the Victorian 11 strokes behind leader Lee Westwood, in equal 16th place.

And Scott, who described his second round putting performance as the worst of his life, was not much better as he carded 72 to trail by 12 shots.

“It’s been an incredibly frustrating week with the putter,” Ogilvy said.

“I holed three birdie putts and the longest was four feet maybe.

“I missed at least five or six that were less than 10 feet, so it was a day that could have been really, really special.

“I made a couple of good (par) saves, so that makes up for a couple (of the misses but) you can’t get it done around here putting like that.”

Ogilvy is usually an excellent putter and it is true that several of his shortish birdie chances were most difficult downhill putts that he had to tap defensively.

“Putting is unexplainable,” he said, preferring not to over-analyse.

“If you try hard to fix something it usually goes the wrong way.

“Some weeks you hole them, some weeks you don’t. I’m doing all the same things I do when I do make them. They’re just not going in.”

Meanwhile, nobody who made the cut has had more putts than Scott, who admitted he putted like an amateur.

He was 3-under for the round after 13 holes, until he missed a short par putt at the 14th that took the wind right out of his sails.

He missed another short one from 1.5 metres at 15, barely touching the hole, and yet another dropped shot at the last completed a miserable hour.

“It’s really smoke and mirrors, just false hope,” said Scott.

“It’s just so frustrating to play this well and putt so poorly, especially here, because it’s magnified.

“It’s hard to read (the break) when you don’t know how hard you’re going to hit it. My rhythm is off in my stroke and my confidence is down.

“I’ve missed so many putts now that I’m finding it hard to see them going in.

“I thought I was playing good enough to be in contention and I certainly am.”

“Thirty-five putts yesterday and probably a few less today – that’s pitiful.”

As Scott left the scoring hut, he almost bumped into leader Lee Westwood, who was walking from the ninth green to the 10th tee.

Westwood has had eight fewer putts than Scott.

As the saying goes, you drive for show and putt for dough, not to mention a green jacket.

Westwood fires English challenge at Masters

Eighteen greens in regulation in the opening round meant that Lee Westwood has made his best-ever start to a Masters campaign at the 11th time of asking.

The European number one had seven birdies and two bogeys en route to a 5-under-par 67 that gave him a share of the lead and confirmed his position as one of the favourites for the tournament.

It was, he said, “easily the best” he had played over the famed Augusta National Golf Club course.

“That was a 67 that could have been a 64 or anything today,” he said.

“You go out here, every green in regulation, I missed seven by about that far (indicating two feet) and 13 by that far away (an inch).

“Each time I missed it the right side. Eighteen greens in regulation around here – I don’t think people often do that.”

Westwood knows that this year he is expected in many quarters to finally win the major title that has eluded him in the past, notably last year when he missed getting into a play-off for the British Open by one stroke and at the 2008 US Open.

His form has been consistently good over the last 12 months, winning the Race to Dubai in November and then producing his best-ever start to the season this year.

And Augusta, he believes, is a course that suits him down to the ground.

“It does feel like a golf course that ought to suit me,” he said.

“Over the last few years, I’ve gradually found a way to plod my way around and feel more comfortable.

“I was saying to Billy (Foster), my caddie, coming up the last, that although it’s the best I’ve ever played around here, it’s the most comfortable I’ve felt on the golf course.

“I’m gradually working out a way for me to get around this golf course in as few shots as possible.”

Ian Poulter also worked his way onto the leaderboard with a 4-under 68 which put him into a four-way tie for seventh, level with Tiger Woods.

Governor’s stinging rebuke for Bartlett

In a rare move, Tasmanian Governor Peter Underwood has released his reasons for commissioning Labor to attempt to govern the state, and in doing so delivered a rebuke to the Premier.

Mr Underwood said David Bartlett did not have the right to promise power to Liberal leader Will Hodgman.

Mr Hodgman, meanwhile, says the events of the past few days show that the Liberals were outmanoeuvred by Labor lies.

The Opposition Leader thought he was going to be the next premier but the Governor dashed his hopes yesterday afternoon.

“Mr Hodgman advised me on the 8th of April that he didn’t seek the support of the Greens party,” Mr Underwood said in his statement.

“My failure to be satisfied that Mr Hodgman had the support of the Labor party not to block supply and not to move a vote of no confidence, except in extreme circumstances, gave rise to a constitutional obligation on the part of the holder of the commission to form government.”

This obligation arose regardless of whether Mr Bartlett had the support of the Greens Party or not.

The Liberals are furious because on April Fools’ Day the Premier made this promise:

“Labor will only ever move no confidence motions in the most serious circumstances of gross maladministration, of corruption or incompetence or in those circumstances. I mean that’s always going to be the case,” Mr Bartlett said.

But in a letter to the Governor on Wednesday, Mr Bartlett said he would not make any assurances about no-confidence motions or blocking supply.

Mr Hodgman quickly gave the Governor a copy Mr Bartlett’s April Fools’ Day press conference.

But in his statement the Governor said he decided to commission Labor because of the Premier’s recent letter where Mr Bartlett refused to support the Liberals.

“I considered the material and the contention and concluded that even if I was able to determine from the material given to me that Mr Bartlett has made the commitments Mr Hodgman said he made, his present intention is clearly expressed in the letter set out above,” Mr Underwood wrote.

“In these circumstances, I came to the conclusion that Mr Hodgman was not in a position to form a stable government.”

Broken promise?

Mr Hodgman says Mr Bartlett has broken his promise in order to hang onto power.

“It was deliberate, not only recanting from his original position, but it did directly leave the Governor, in my view, in a invidious position where Mr Bartlett was saying on one hand I’ll pretend to give the Liberals power but I will also threaten to take them down at the first opportunity,” he said.

“How can Mr Bartlett seriously say he was giving us an opportunity to test things on the floor of the house? He wasn’t even giving us an opportunity to get there.”

Mr Bartlett is not responding to the Governor’s statement.

Constitutional law expert Michael Stokes says it is rare that the Governor has released his advice, but Mr Stokes says that is because there is usually a majority government.

“I’m not aware of another, similar precedent. This is something which hasn’t happened in my lifetime, if you like,” he said.

During the election the Liberal and Labor parties had an agreement that if they won the same amount of seats, as they did, whichever party got more votes should form a minority government.

The Liberals got more votes and assumed government was theirs for the taking. But in his statement the Governor said the agreement was irrelevant to his decision.

“The commissioning of a person to form a government is entirely the governor’s prerogative and it is not within the gift of any political leader to hand over or cede to another political leader the right to form a government, whatever the result of the election,” he wrote.

The Governor has sent Labor back to test their power on the floor of the Parliament.

Asylum freeze ‘politically motivated’

The Federal Opposition has attacked the Government’s decision to suspend asylum seeker claims from Sri Lanka and Afghanistan, saying it is politically motivated and will not stop the boats coming to Australia.

Prime Minister Kevin Rudd says the suspension – of three months for Sri Lankans and six months for Afghanis – is due to “changing circumstances” in both countries.

But Opposition Leader Tony Abbott says it shows the Government knows its policy is failing.

“This is an admission by the Government that it was always pull factors – not push factors – that was causing the flow of boats,” he said.

Opposition immigration spokesman Scott Morrison says the Government has known for a month that the situations in Afghanistan and Sri Lanka were changing.

“It simply prompts you to ask the question: why today?” he said.

“All they have done is try to put this issue into suspended animation. What they haven’t done is put forward a plan to stop the boats.”

Mr Morrison says the Government is putting off action on dealing with asylum seekers until after the upcoming federal election.

“They are going to clog up the system even more as boat after boat after boat arrives,” he said.

“Clearly they will just spill onto the mainland as they already have now.”

Greens Senator Sarah Hanson-Young says the suspension will be as dangerous for asylum seekers as the previous government’s system of temporary protection visas.

“The decision of the Government to change their policies are less about the conditions in these countries and more about the political conditions here in Australia,” she said.

“This is about politics. This is not about humanity.”

Immigration Minister Chris Evans says Sri Lankans and Afghanis already on Christmas Island will still have their applications processed, as will those currently bring taken there by the Navy.

But he says from now on, anyone from those countries who is intercepted will be taken to the island and will have to wait until the suspension is lifted.

‘Morally abhorrent’

Human Rights Commission president Catherine Branson says the Government’s changes mean asylum seekers will be detained indefinitely.

She says the commission is considering another visit to Christmas Island to monitor the conditions there.

“We did late last year publish a quite comprehensive report about Christmas Island, but I am very conscious of the fact that conditions there have changed since that time and not for the better,” Ms Branson said.

“We are considering the possibility of again travelling to Christmas Island to update our report.”

Bassina Farbenblum, the director of the University of NSW Migrant and Refugee Rights Project, says the Government’s move breaches the UN’s Refugee Convention.

She says it is immoral to detain Afghanis and Sri Lankans for long periods to deter other asylum seekers.

“It is profoundly discriminatory. Australia will be violating it’s international obligations to detain people for the minimum necessary period, and honestly it’s morally abhorrent,” Ms Farbenblum said.

The Refugee Council says while it is not supporting the suspension, it is a legitimate response to the problem of asylum seekers provided people are not sent back to face persecution.

“This is an attempt to crack a circuit breaker and I can understand why they’re doing that, as long as they continue to adhere to the humane policies which they have supported,” Refugee Council president John Gibson said.

“We will just have to keep a very close eye on what’s going on.”

Mr Gibson says he is concerned the Government’s decision has been made without proper scrutiny of the conditions in Sri Lanka and Afghanistan.

He says there needs to be lasting improvement before refugees from those countries are treated any differently.

“When there is a change of circumstances it should be sustainable and durable, and as far as Sri Lanka is concerned – and possibly some parts of Afghanistan – one would have to look carefully at whether in fact that is the case,” Mr Gibson said.

And he says the hysteria that has taken hold of Australians over the asylum seeker issue remains.

“I’d like to see the shift and focus towards the positive solutions, looking globally and regionally, rather than this obsession over how many boats arrive,” he said.

He says the number of asylum seekers accepted in Australia still pales in comparison to those accepted in other countries.

RSPCA backs push for koala removal inquiry

The RSPCA says an Upper House inquiry would give it the opportunity to tell its side of the story about the removal of eight koalas from Gunnedah’s Waterways Wildlife Park in north-west New South Wales.

The NSW Coalition has announced it will support the Greens’ push for a parliamentary investigation into why the animals were removed.

The park’s owners have disputed claims that the animals were malnourished and dehydrated and have accused the RSPCA of ignoring its own guidelines.

The inquiry would also examine the organisation’s relationship with a reality TV show that filmed the removal.

RSPCA CEO Steve Coleman says his organisation has done nothing wrong.

“The RSPCA welcomes the inquiry, why wouldn’t we?” he said.

“It provides an opportunity for the RSPCA to tell the other side of the story. It’s then and only then a point in time when people can make an informed judgment about what has or hasn’t occurred.

“We would hope to be able to tell the whole story without fear or favour, we have been unable to do that up until know due to issues around fairness and it being potentially material that might be considered defamatory.

“If via a parliamentary inquiry there is the opportunity without those issues being on foot to provide simply the facts, absolutely we welcome that opportunity.”

The Minister for Primary Industries, Steve Whan, says an independent veterinary report into the condition of the animals that were removed from the park appears to support the RSPCA’s actions.

He says Industry and Investment NSW is currently considering options in relation to various alleged breaches of the Exhibited Animals Protection Act by the park’s owners.

Science curriculum ‘sends students backwards’

Teachers say a draft national science curriculum will be a significant step backwards for year-seven students in New South Wales.

The Science Teachers’ Association says year-seven topics have been chosen so they can be taught without a laboratory or a specialised teacher because high school does not start until year eight in Queensland, Western Australia and South Australia.

The association’s president, Margaret Watts, says the proposed changes will make it much harder to engage young students.

She says science in year seven will be reduced to a largely descriptive course without the opportunities for hands-on experiments.

“There is going to be a delay in children getting to use the equipment that they would begin to use and learn science in the way that they would normally begin to learn science in year seven in NSW, through the inquiry method, through doing investigations, through learning to use a range of science equipment,” she said.

The Greens say the State Government should reject the draft curriculum.

The Government says it is only a draft curriculum, which people have the opportunity to comment on until May 23.

Libs say Labor doctored advice to Governor

Tasmanian Opposition Leader Will Hodgman has continued his attack on legal advice given to the Governor by caretaker Premier David Bartlett.

Mr Hodgman says it appears Labor omitted a paragraph from an interview transcript in the advice given to Governor Peter Underwood.

He says the paragraph quoted Mr Bartlett saying he would never move a motion of no confidence in a government, except in the most serious circumstances.

Mr Hodgman says omitting that part of the transcript generated doubt about the viability of a Liberal minority administration.

“When I received a copy of what Mr Bartlett had apparently sent to his Excellency, and that included a transcript of an interview that was not complete and just happened to exclude that one paragraph where Mr Bartlett said they would not move no confidence in a minority government that, in my view, has me quite legitimately asking Mr Bartlett to explain that,” he said.

“In the most extraordinary of circumstances where the Governor of Tasmania is contemplating commissioning a new government and Mr Bartlett can not even be trusted to provide His Excellency with all the information, I find [it] extraordinary.”

The ABC is seeking a response from Labor.

Governor’s reasons

The Governor has released his reasons for inviting Mr Bartlett to form the state’s next government.

Mr Underwood says he was constitutionally obliged to invite Mr Bartlett to form government because he was not satisfied there would be stability under Liberal leader Will Hodgman.

The Governor says Mr Bartlett’s pre-election promise to give up power if the Liberals polled more of the statewide vote was consitutionally irrelevant.

Meanwhile, Mr Hodgman has again ruled out a deal with the Greens to secure minority government.

Mr Hodgman says he is now focusing on a role as the state’s Opposition Leader.

Greens Leader Nick McKim says his door will remain open to the Liberals and Labor if they want to strike a formal deal.

“The way that Will can deliver that real change, if he’s fair dinkum about it, is simply to pick up the phone or drop me a text or an email,” he said.

“We could sit down maturely and constructively and work through a process which may end up in a formal arrangement between the Greens and the Liberals.”

But Mr Hodgman has again ruled that out.

“I’ve always said no deals. I can’t stop Mr McKim or Mr Bartlett manoeuvring themselves into a position where they can form some sort of coalition government and nor do I intend to do that,” he said.

“It’s a decision they’ve made and they have said they are going to make it work. Well, my job is to hold them to account.”